1 / 31

PACS Instrument Model and Performance Prediction

PACS Instrument Model and Performance Prediction. A. Poglitsch. PACS Instrument Model. Purpose of instrument model: provide best guess of in-orbit performance based on existing knowledge of the instrument and its subunits and the satellite

Download Presentation

PACS Instrument Model and Performance Prediction

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. PACS Instrument Model andPerformance Prediction A. Poglitsch Instrument Performance Prediction

  2. PACS Instrument Model • Purpose of instrument model: provide best guess of in-orbit performance based on existing knowledge of the instrument and its subunits and the satellite • Incomplete knowledge about FM subunit / instrument / system performance • Some knowledge of QM instrument performance, but with degraded subunit and OGSE performance • Instrument model is a “living document” that has been maintained since the early design phases of PACS and updated whenever new test results became available • Parameters lacking experimental values have been assigned calculated or estimated values • PACS instrument model is not a deliverable document (but has been used regularly as a reference for preparation and evaluation of tests and their results) Instrument Performance Prediction

  3. Spectrometer Model Model strategy • Determine the background power reaching an individual detector (pixel) and determine the NEP of an individual detector under this background (photon noise + detector/readout noise) • Determine the coupling of an astronomical (point) source to the detector array • Telescope PSF • Vignetting / diffraction in instrument • Transmission of optical elements (mirrors, filters, grating) • Detector (quantum) efficiency • Effective number of pixels (spatial/spectral) needed for optimum source/line extraction and resulting total noise and fraction of detected source flux • Combine above results to calculate “raw” noise referred to sky • Add overheads created by need for background subtraction (AOT-dependent) Instrument Performance Prediction

  4. Detector Performance • Relative spectral response within modules • Relative photometric response within modules • Absolute photometric peak responsivity (moduleaverage) Instrument Performance Prediction

  5. noise bias [mV] bias [mV] HS Detector Performance Model 4.7x10-15 W 2.9x10-15 W signal Circles: measured noise Dashed line: CRE noise Squares: CRE noise subtr. Solid lines: combined model Dotted lines: background noise • Observed noise consistent with photon noise + CRE noise (input-equivalent current noise density) • Peak QE=0.26; QE(l) follows directly from rel. spectral responsivity • Average CRE noise 3.7x10-16 A/√Hz, average peak responsivity 45 A/W Instrument Performance Prediction

  6. LS Detector Model • No reliable measurement of peak QE available; assumed to be the same as for HS detectors (by design) • Quite limited consequence for system performance – CRE noise and responsivity dominate (see below) • CRE noise same as for HS detector • Average peak responsivity 10…12 A/W Instrument Performance Prediction

  7. Spectrometer Model: Background Basics (Calculated for groups/ elements along optical train from telescope to detector) AW: etendue of optical train (conserved by optics, except for detector light cones) n: optical frequency d: detected optical bandwidth (around given frequency) T: temperature of emitter em: emissivity of emitter t: transmission of all optics between respective emitter and detector h: detector quantum efficiency Instrument Performance Prediction

  8. Spectrometer Model: Background Etendue throughout optical train, for all contributions from outside of the 5K environment [deviations are lumped into effective emissivities] AWcold := 4 AW correcting for the effective cone acceptance angle seeing the 5K optics Instrument Performance Prediction

  9. Spectrometer Model: Background/Straylight Temperatures and Emissivities • PACS-external contributions dominant Instrument Performance Prediction

  10. Spectrometer Model: Background/Straylight Transmission to Detector and Bandwidth • Bandwidth same for all background contributions except 5K post-grating (which is negligible) • Effective transmission for background contributions varies slightly (pupil aperture sizes etc.) Telescope backgroundtransmission Background optical bandwidth/pixel [Hz] Wavelength [µm] Wavelength [µm] Instrument Performance Prediction

  11. Spectrometer Model: Transmission Breakdown • Filter transmission based on RT FTS measurements of FM filters • Dichroic will be replaced before ILT Filter transmission Calculated grating efficiency Wavelength [µm] Wavelength [µm] Instrument Performance Prediction

  12. Spectrometer Model: Transmission Breakdown • Slicer efficiency: vignetting of diffraction side lobes by optics • Additional transmission factors • Lyot stop efficiency: 0.9(diffraction by field stop plus telescope/instrument alignment tolerances) • Mirror train: 0.85(dissipation, scattering) Calculated slicer efficiency Wavelength [µm] Instrument Performance Prediction

  13. Spectrometer Model: Additional Optical Efficiencies Relevant for Source Coupling • Telescope efficiency: fraction of power received from point source measured in central peak of PSF • Pixel efficiency: inverse number of pixels (spatial/spectral) needed to retrieve power of unresolved spectral line in central peak of PSF Estimated telescope main beamefficiency (diffraction + WFE) Calculated pixel efficiency Wavelength [µm] Wavelength [µm] Instrument Performance Prediction

  14. Background Power and BLIP Noise per Pixel • HS detector QE based on measurement (peak QE + relative spectral responsivity) • LS detector QE based on assumed, same peak QE + relative spectral responsivity measurement QE Background power [W] BLIP NEP [W/√Hz] Wavelength [µm] Wavelength [µm] Wavelength [µm] Instrument Performance Prediction

  15. BLIP Noise vs. Readout Noise • BLIPNEP converted to electrical noise (solid lines) • Readout noise (dashed line) • BLIPNEP (and, therefore, QE) significant/dominant noise source in “red” band (1st order, HS) • BLIPNEP (and, therefore, QE) not dominant noise source – readout noise and responsivity relevant NEI [A/√Hz] = NEP [W/√Hz] x responsivity [A/W] NEI [A/√Hz] Wavelength [µm] Instrument Performance Prediction

  16. Total Noise at Detector and Coupling to Sky Coupling correction Total NEP [W/√Hz] Wavelength [µm] Wavelength [µm] • Total NEP at detector: BLIP NEP and electrical readout-noise equivalent power • Coupling correction: inverse of all optical efficiencies; factor 2 forbackground subtraction; chopper duty-cycle of ≥0.8 Instrument Performance Prediction

  17. Point source continuum sensitivity per spectral resolution element [Jy] (5s, 1h) Point source line sensitivity [W/m2] (5s, 1h) Wavelength [µm] Wavelength [µm] Predicted Sensitivity • Calculated for (off-array) chopping • Wavelength switching could have advantage (spectral line always within instantaneous coverage) or disadvantage (off-line switching and likely need for off-position observation) Instrument Performance Prediction

  18. Operation/Performance under p+ Irradiation Simulated chopped observation with one ramp/chopper plateau. For each bias value, 5 ramp lengths tested: 1s, 1/2 s, 1/4 s, 1/8s, 1/16 s. The detector was in its high responsivity plateau, ~2 hours after the last curing. NEP as a function of detector/readout setting Instrument model value,based on lab measurementswithout irradiation • With optimum bias setting (lower than in lab!) and ramp length / chopping parameters, NEP close to lab values possible in space • Curing may be necessary only after solar flare, or once per day (self- curing under telescope IR background sufficient) Instrument Performance Prediction

  19. Spectral Resolving Power • Simple calculation, requiring some fine tuning • Pixel sampling • Exact grating illumination(physical optics) Resolving power Wavelength [µm] Instrument Performance Prediction

  20. Main Limitations of Spectrometer Model • No “systematics”/ higher-order effects and their implications for AOTs considered • no real instrument simulator • No end-to-end test of instrument in representative high-energy radiation environment • Limited feed-back from QM ILT • Serious uncertainty about detector responsivity makes evaluation of instrument optical efficiency difficult • Defocus, low transmission and high/inhomogeneous window emissivity have hampered PSF determination • Lack of laser source (or adequate gas cell) – no unresolved, strong lines available Instrument Performance Prediction

  21. Photometer Model Model strategy • Determine the background power reaching an individual detector (pixel) and determine the NEP of an individual detector under this background (photon noise + detector/readout noise) • Determine the coupling of an astronomical (point) source to the detector array • Telescope PSF • Vignetting / diffraction in instrument • Transmission of optical elements (mirrors, filters) • Detector (quantum) efficiency • Effective number of pixels needed for optimum source extraction and resulting total noise and fraction of detected source flux • Combine above results to calculate “raw” noise referred to sky • Add overheads created by need for background subtraction (AOT-dependent) Instrument Performance Prediction

  22. Bolometer Performance • Pixel yield ~98% • NEP “blue” ~1.7...2 x nominal • Small variation with BG power • But 1/f noise • Best NEP only for fast modulation (chopping/ scanning) • NEP “red” slightly higher NEP vs.backgroundpower “blue” BFP Instrument Performance Prediction

  23. Photometer Model: Background Basics (Calculated for groups/ elements along optical train from telescope to detector) Crude approximation for largebandwidth of photometer! (But it doesn’t matter.) AW: etendue of optical train (conserved by optics, except for detector light cones) n: optical frequency d: detected optical bandwidth (around given frequency) T: temperature of emitter em: emissivity of emitter t: transmission of all optics between respective emitter and detector h: detector quantum efficiency Instrument Performance Prediction

  24. Photometer Model: Background Etendue “Red” Photometer: 6.4”□ pixels“Blue” Photometer: 3.2”□ pixels throughout optical train, for all contributions from outside of the 5K environment [deviations are lumped into effective emissivities] AWcold := 10 AW correcting for the effective detector/baffle acceptance cone seeing the 5K optics Instrument Performance Prediction

  25. Photometer Model: Background/Straylight Temperatures and Emissivities • PACS-external contributions dominant Instrument Performance Prediction

  26. Photometer Model: Background/Straylight Transmission to Detector and Bandwidth • Bandwidth same for all background contributions except 5K post-grating (which is negligible) • Filter transmission based on RT FTS measurements of FM filters • Dichroic will be replaced before ILT Instrument Performance Prediction

  27. Photometer Background Power andNoise per Pixel • QE assumed to be 0.8 (from bolometer absorber structure reflectivity measurement) for BLIPNEP • Realisation of “measured NEP” requires modulation near 3 Hz (1/f noise) Instrument Performance Prediction

  28. Photometer Model: Additional Optical Efficiencies Relevant for Source Coupling • Telescope efficiency: fraction of power received from point source measured in central peak of PSF • Pixel efficiency: inverse number of pixels needed to retrieve power in central peak of PSF Instrument Performance Prediction

  29. Total Coupling to Sky • Coupling correction • inverse of all optical efficiencies • factor 2 for background subtraction • chopper duty-cycleof ≥0.8 Instrument Performance Prediction

  30. 5 off-position chopping 4 3 on-array chopping/line scanning [mJy] (point source; 5s/1h) 2 1 0 50 100 150 200 wavelength [µm] Predicted Sensitivity • Point source sensitivity equivalent to mapping speed of ~10’ x 10’ in 1 day Photometric Bands filter transmission wavelength [µm] Instrument Performance Prediction

  31. Main Limitations of Photometer Model • No “systematics”/ higher-order effects and their implications for AOTs considered • no real instrument simulator • Origin of 1/f noise not clear • Is it driven thermally? • Will operation in PACS cryostat be representative for in-orbit Herschel cryostat thermal (in)stability? • Limited feed-back from QM ILT • Serious uncertainty about detector responsivity makes evaluation of instrument optical efficiency difficult • Defocus, low transmission and high/inhomogeneous window emissivity have hampered PSF determination Instrument Performance Prediction

More Related