Abstract:
We are developing compact astronomical payloads for ultraviolet (UV) observations
from CubeSats and high altitude balloons. It is important to have
a highly sensitive, low noise detector in the UV region where the incoming
photons are very few. Micro Channel Plate (MCP) based photon counting
detectors are widely used in UV astronomy due to their low noise levels, high
sensitivity, and large area.
The rst part of the thesis describes the design, fabrication, and characterization
of a photon counting, intensi ed CMOS (iCMOS) detector. The
detector consists of a Z-stack, 40 mm MCP from Photek with an S20 photocathode
and a phosphor screen anode. The readout system uses o -the-shelf
components for the focusing optics, image sensor, and backend electronics. The
heart of the electronics is a Field Programmable Gate Array (FPGA) board
that controls the input signals from the CMOS and interfaces the output data
to storage and telemetry. The FPGA performs real-time data processing as
well, including the identi cation of actual photon events and their centroiding
with sub-pixel accuracy.
The detector is being used as the back end instrument of two of our UV
payloads on a balloon platform above 40 km. One of the instruments is berfed,
near UV spectrograph for atmospheric observations in the 250 { 400 nm
region. The detector also
ies on a wide- eld UV imager for observing solar
system objects such as comets and asteroids and other bright UV transients.
It is an all-refractive 70 mm telescope in the 250 { 350 nm wavelength range
with a 10:8 eld of view.
One of the space-
ight opportunities for the detector is the PESIT-IIA Observatory
for the Night Sky (PIONS), a near UV imaging telescope to be
own
on a small satellite. The major scienti c goals are to detect and characterize
transients such as massive star explosions, stellar
ares, and tidal disruption
events. The camera has a 150 mm primary aperture with a 3 eld of view
and images the sky in the 180 { 280 nm region with a 1300 resolution. We can
observe targets as faint as 21st magnitude in a 1200 seconds exposure.
We are also working on far UV instruments and detectors, by assembling
a bare MCP with a custom-coated, semi-transparent photocathode. The photocathode
is fabricated by thin lm deposition of CsI crystals on an MgF2
window. I will also brie
y describe the future work on the design and fabrication
of an FUV imaging spectrograph and associated technologies.