HiPERCAM: A high-speed, quintuple-beam CCD camera for the study of rapid variability in the Universe
V. S. Dhillon, T. R. Marsh, N. Bezawada, M. Black, S. Dixon, T., Gamble, D. Henry, P. Kerry, S. P. Littlefair, D. W. Lunney, T. Morris, J., Osborn, R. W. Wilson

TL;DR
HiPERCAM is a high-speed, multi-band CCD camera designed for studying rapid astronomical variability, featuring advanced detectors, fast frame rates, and innovative optical and mechanical design improvements.
Contribution
The paper introduces HiPERCAM, a significantly improved high-speed camera with multi-band imaging, advanced detectors, and innovative construction, building on ULTRACAM's success.
Findings
Achieves over 1000 frames per second in multiple optical bands.
Uses custom deep-depletion CCDs with high quantum efficiency.
Incorporates scintillation noise correction and lightweight structure.
Abstract
HiPERCAM is a high-speed camera for the study of rapid variability in the Universe. The project is funded by a 3.5MEuro European Research Council Advanced Grant. HiPERCAM builds on the success of our previous instrument, ULTRACAM, with very significant improvements in performance thanks to the use of the latest technologies. HiPERCAM will use 4 dichroic beamsplitters to image simultaneously in 5 optical channels covering the u'g'r'i'z' bands. Frame rates of over 1000 per second will be achievable using an ESO CCD controller (NGC), with every frame GPS timestamped. The detectors are custom-made, frame-transfer CCDs from e2v, with 4 low-noise (2.5e-) outputs, mounted in small thermoelectrically-cooled heads operated at 180 K, resulting in virtually no dark current. The two reddest CCDs will be deep-depletion devices with anti-etaloning, providing high quantum efficiencies across the red…
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