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Flux Dependent Non- Linearity: The Evil Twin of Persistence Mike Regan, Kevin Lindsay, Eddie Bergeron, Rachel Anderson

Flux Dependent Non-Linearity: The Evil Twin of Persistence

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Flux Dependent Non-Linearity: The Evil Twin of Persistence. Mike Regan, Kevin Lindsay, Eddie Bergeron, Rachel Anderson. Photons captured in the depletion region yield an electron/hole pair. As charge accumulates, the depletion region gets smaller exposing empty traps to free charge. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Flux Dependent Non-Linearity: The Evil Twin of Persistence

Flux Dependent Non-Linearity:The Evil Twin of Persistence

Mike Regan, Kevin Lindsay, Eddie Bergeron, Rachel Anderson

Page 2: Flux Dependent Non-Linearity: The Evil Twin of Persistence

Photons captured in the depletion region yield an electron/hole pair.

Page 3: Flux Dependent Non-Linearity: The Evil Twin of Persistence

As charge accumulates, the depletion region gets smaller exposing empty traps to free charge.

Page 4: Flux Dependent Non-Linearity: The Evil Twin of Persistence

After a reset trapped electrons and holes are left in the depletion region.

Page 5: Flux Dependent Non-Linearity: The Evil Twin of Persistence

During the next exposure the electrons/holes decay from the traps and are seen as an increase in the voltage.

Page 6: Flux Dependent Non-Linearity: The Evil Twin of Persistence

But what happens during the original exposure?

Page 7: Flux Dependent Non-Linearity: The Evil Twin of Persistence

During an exposure traps capture charge decreasing the observed voltage.

Page 8: Flux Dependent Non-Linearity: The Evil Twin of Persistence

This model makes several predictions.

• Flat field response will be lower at low fluxes in high trap regions.

• Detector bias changes that decrease the size of the depletion region will induce “negative persistence”.

• Slopes after cosmic rays will be lower.

Page 9: Flux Dependent Non-Linearity: The Evil Twin of Persistence

Trap Density Map in our “Beautiful” Device.

Page 10: Flux Dependent Non-Linearity: The Evil Twin of Persistence

Flat Fields

Page 11: Flux Dependent Non-Linearity: The Evil Twin of Persistence

The Ratio of high and low flux flat fields shows a difference in the high trap region.

Flux ratio was a factor of 60.

Page 12: Flux Dependent Non-Linearity: The Evil Twin of Persistence

Bias change to decrease depletion region

Page 13: Flux Dependent Non-Linearity: The Evil Twin of Persistence

The measured slopes on the device are negative after we change the bias.

Page 14: Flux Dependent Non-Linearity: The Evil Twin of Persistence

The negative observed rates decay away just like persistence.

Page 15: Flux Dependent Non-Linearity: The Evil Twin of Persistence

Cosmic Rays

Page 16: Flux Dependent Non-Linearity: The Evil Twin of Persistence

The slope after a cosmic ray is lower and is proportional to the magnitude of the CR

Page 17: Flux Dependent Non-Linearity: The Evil Twin of Persistence

Conclusions

• The model matches all the observations.

• The observed QE is a function of the flux -> Flux dependent QE

• Determining slopes when there is a cosmic ray is not simple (as I thought before).