Precision of a Low-Cost InGaAs Detector for Near Infrared Photometry
Peter W. Sullivan, Bryce Croll, Robert A. Simcoe

TL;DR
This paper demonstrates that low-cost InGaAs detectors can achieve high-precision near-infrared photometry with small telescopes, enabling new possibilities for exoplanet studies and stellar observations.
Contribution
The study presents a custom-designed InGaAs camera with optimized electronics that achieves near-Poisson limited photometry on small telescopes, a significant advancement over prior more expensive detectors.
Findings
Achieved 0.52 mmag photometric precision with a 0.25 m telescope.
Demonstrated effective cooling reduces dark current significantly.
Potential for simultaneous optical and near-infrared observations.
Abstract
We have designed, constructed, and tested an InGaAs near-infrared camera to explore whether low-cost detectors can make small (<1 m) telescopes capable of precise (<1 mmag) infrared photometry of relatively bright targets. The camera is constructed around the 640x512 pixel APS640C sensor built by FLIR Electro-Optical Components. We designed custom analog-to-digital electronics for maximum stability and minimum noise. The InGaAs dark current halves with every 7 deg C of cooling, and we reduce it to 840 e-/s/pixel (with a pixel-to-pixel variation of +/-200 e-/s/pixel) by cooling the array to -20 deg C. Beyond this point, glow from the readout dominates. The single-sample read noise of 149 e- is reduced to 54 e- through up-the-ramp sampling. Laboratory testing with a star field generated by a lenslet array shows that 2-star differential photometry is possible to a precision of 631 +/-205…
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