Curved detectors for astronomical applications: characterization results on different samples.

Due to the increasing dimension, complexity, and cost of future astronomical surveys, new technologies enabling more compact and simpler systems are required. The development of curved detectors allows enhancement of the performances of the optical system used (telescope or astronomical instrument), while keeping the system more compact. We describe here a set of five curved complementary metal-oxide semiconductor (CMOS) detectors developed within a collaboration between CEA-LETI and CNRS-LAM. These fully functional detectors 20 Mpix (CMOSIS CMV20000) have been curved to different radii of curvature and spherical shapes (both convex and concave) over a size of 24×32  mm2. Before being able to use them for astronomical observations, we assess the impact of the curving process on their performances. We perform a full electro-optical characterization of the curved detectors, by measuring the gain, the full well capacity, the dynamic range, and the noise properties, such as dark current, readout noise, pixel-relative non-uniformity. We repeat the same process for the flat version of the same CMOS sensor, as a reference for comparison. We find no significant difference among most of the characterization values of the curved and flat samples. We obtain values of readout noise of 10e- for the curved samples compared to the 11e- of the flat sample, which provides slightly larger dynamic ranges for the curved detectors. Additionally, we measure consistently smaller values of dark current compared to the flat CMOS sensor. The curving process for the prototypes shown in this paper does not significantly impact the performances of the detectors. These results represent the first step toward their astronomical implementation.

[1]  Christophe Gaschet,et al.  Curved sensors for compact high-resolution wide-field designs: prototype demonstration and optical characterization , 2018, OPTO.

[2]  E. L. le Coarer,et al.  Curved focal plane detector array for wide field cameras. , 2012, Applied optics.

[3]  Steve B. Howell,et al.  Handbook of CCD Astronomy , 2000 .

[4]  Pradyumna Kumar Swain,et al.  Curved CCD detector devices and arrays for multispectral astrophysical applications and terrestrial stereo panoramic cameras , 2004, SPIE Astronomical Telescopes + Instrumentation.

[5]  Bernard Delabre,et al.  First results from a novel curving process for large area scientific imagers , 2012, Other Conferences.

[6]  Yann Gaeremynck,et al.  Hemispherical curved monolithic cooled and uncooled infrared focal plane arrays for compact cameras , 2014, Defense + Security Symposium.

[7]  Emmanuel Hugot,et al.  Fast, wide-field and distortion-free telescope with curved detectors for surveys at ultralow surface brightness. , 2017, Applied optics.

[8]  Paolo Conconi,et al.  Society of Photo-Optical Instrumentation Engineers (SPIE) Conference Series , 2012 .

[9]  R M Osgood,et al.  Development and application of spherically curved charge-coupled device imagers. , 2015, Applied optics.

[10]  David Valls-Gabaud,et al.  The MESSIER surveyor: unveiling the ultra-low surface brightness universe , 2016, Proceedings of the International Astronomical Union.

[11]  G. H. Sanders,et al.  The Thirty Meter Telescope (TMT): An International Observatory , 2013 .

[12]  Tomas Chylek,et al.  Design of the Giant Magellan Telescope , 2014, Astronomical Telescopes and Instrumentation.

[13]  Richard Willingale,et al.  Additive manufactured x-ray optics for astronomy , 2017, Optical Engineering + Applications.

[14]  K. Itonaga,et al.  A novel curved CMOS image sensor integrated with imaging system , 2014, 2014 Symposium on VLSI Technology (VLSI-Technology): Digest of Technical Papers.

[15]  Eric C. Bellm,et al.  The Zwicky Transient Facility , 2013, 1410.8185.

[16]  E. Massoni,et al.  Mechanical behavior of flexible silicon devices curved in spherical configurations , 2013, 2013 14th International Conference on Thermal, Mechanical and Multi-Physics Simulation and Experiments in Microelectronics and Microsystems (EuroSimE).

[17]  Howard Isaacson,et al.  Kepler Planet-Detection Mission: Introduction and First Results , 2010, Science.

[18]  Peter Brewer,et al.  Highly curved image sensors: a practical approach for improved optical performance , 2017, Optics express.