Measurements of Si Hybrid CMOS X-Ray Detector Characteristics
Stephen D. Bongiorno, Abe D. Falcone, David N. Burrows, Robert Cook,, Yibin Bai, and Mark Farris

TL;DR
This paper evaluates the performance of Hybrid CMOS Detectors for X-ray astronomy, highlighting their advantages over CCDs like faster readout, radiation hardness, and potential for improved observation of bright sources.
Contribution
It provides detailed measurements of noise, gain, and energy resolution for HCDs, demonstrating their suitability for future X-ray telescope applications.
Findings
HCDs achieve comparable noise and energy resolution to CCDs.
Multi-output readout enables faster frame rates and reduced pileup.
Radiation damage affects individual pixels, not entire rows.
Abstract
The development of Hybrid CMOS Detectors (HCDs) for X-Ray telescope focal planes will place them in con- tention with CCDs on future satellite missions due to their faster frame rates, flexible readout scenarios, lower power consumption, and inherent radiation hardness. CCDs have been used with great success on the current generation of X-Ray telescopes (e.g. Chandra, XMM, Suzaku, and Swift). However their bucket-brigade read-out architecture, which transfers charge across the chip with discrete component readout electronics, results in clockrate limited readout speeds that cause pileup (saturation) of bright sources and an inherent susceptibility to radiation induced displacement damage that limits mission lifetime. In contrast, HCDs read pixels with low power, on-chip multiplexer electronics in a random access fashion. Faster frame rates achieved with multi-output readout design will…
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