Digging supplementary buried channels: investigating the notch architecture within the CCD pixels on ESA's Gaia satellite
G. M. Seabroke (1, 2), T. Prod'homme (3, 4), N. J. Murray (2),, C. Crowley (5), G. Hopkinson (6), A. G. A. Brown (4), R. Kohley (5), A., Holland (2) ((1) MSSL, UCL, UK, (2) The Open University, UK, (3) ESTEC, ESA,, (4) Leiden Observatory, (5) ESAC, ESA

TL;DR
This paper investigates the supplementary buried channels in Gaia satellite CCD pixels, revealing manufacturing differences affecting performance predictions and proposing in-orbit calibration methods to improve astrometric accuracy.
Contribution
It provides the largest dataset of Gaia CCD SBC measurements, highlights manufacturing impacts on SBC FWCs, and suggests in-orbit calibration to enhance performance predictions.
Findings
Post-2004 CCDs have significantly smaller SBC FWCs than pre-2004.
Current performance predictions are based on outdated SBC data.
In-orbit SBC FWC measurement methods are proposed for better calibration.
Abstract
The European Space Agency (ESA) Gaia satellite has 106 CCD image sensors which will suffer from increased charge transfer inefficiency (CTI) as a result of radiation damage. To aid the mitigation at low signal levels, the CCD design includes Supplementary Buried Channels (SBCs, otherwise known as `notches') within each CCD column. We present the largest published sample of Gaia CCD SBC Full Well Capacity (FWC) laboratory measurements and simulations based on 13 devices. We find that Gaia CCDs manufactured post-2004 have SBCs with FWCs in the upper half of each CCD that are systematically smaller by two orders of magnitude (<50 electrons) compared to those manufactured pre-2004 (thousands of electrons). Gaia's faint star (13 < G < 20 mag) astrometric performance predictions by Prod'homme et al. and Holl et al. use pre-2004 SBC FWCs as inputs to their simulations. However, all the CCDs…
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