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How well can charge transfer inefficiency be corrected? A parameter sensitivity study for iterative correction

Israel, H.; Massey, R.; Prod'homme, T.; Cropper, M.; Cordes, O.; Gow, J.; Kohley, R.; Marggraf, O.; Niemi, S.; Rhodes, J.; Short, A.; Verhoeve, P.

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Authors

H. Israel

T. Prod'homme

M. Cropper

O. Cordes

J. Gow

R. Kohley

O. Marggraf

S. Niemi

J. Rhodes

A. Short

P. Verhoeve



Abstract

Radiation damage to space-based charge-coupled device detectors creates defects which result in an increasing charge transfer inefficiency (CTI) that causes spurious image trailing. Most of the trailing can be corrected during post-processing, by modelling the charge trapping and moving electrons back to where they belong. However, such correction is not perfect – and damage is continuing to accumulate in orbit. To aid future development, we quantify the limitations of current approaches, and determine where imperfect knowledge of model parameters most degrades measurements of photometry and morphology. As a concrete application, we simulate 1.5 × 109 ‘worst-case’ galaxy and 1.5 × 108 star images to test the performance of the Euclid visual instrument detectors. There are two separable challenges. If the model used to correct CTI is perfectly the same as that used to add CTI, 99.68 per cent of spurious ellipticity is corrected in our setup. This is because readout noise is not subject to CTI, but gets overcorrected during correction. Secondly, if we assume the first issue to be solved, knowledge of the charge trap density within Δρ/ρ = (0.0272 ± 0.0005) per cent and the characteristic release time of the dominant species to be known within Δτ/τ = (0.0400 ± 0.0004) per cent will be required. This work presents the next level of definition of in-orbit CTI calibration procedures for Euclid.

Citation

Israel, H., Massey, R., Prod'homme, T., Cropper, M., Cordes, O., Gow, J., …Verhoeve, P. (2015). How well can charge transfer inefficiency be corrected? A parameter sensitivity study for iterative correction. Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society, 453(1), 561-580. https://doi.org/10.1093/mnras/stv1660

Journal Article Type Article
Acceptance Date Jul 20, 2015
Publication Date Oct 11, 2015
Deposit Date Feb 10, 2016
Publicly Available Date Feb 16, 2016
Journal Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society
Print ISSN 0035-8711
Electronic ISSN 1365-2966
Publisher Royal Astronomical Society
Peer Reviewed Peer Reviewed
Volume 453
Issue 1
Pages 561-580
DOI https://doi.org/10.1093/mnras/stv1660
Keywords Instrumentation: detectors, Methods: data analysis, Space vehicles: instruments.

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Copyright Statement
This article has been accepted for publication in Monthly notices of the Royal Astronomical Society ©: 2015 The Authors Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the Royal Astronomical Society. All rights reserved.





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