Background-Limited Imaging in the Near-Infrared with Warm InGaAs Sensors: Applications for Time-Domain Astronomy
Robert A. Simcoe, Gabor Furesz, Peter W. Sullivan, Tim Hellickson,, Andrew Malonis, Mansi M. Kasliwal, Stephen A. Shectman, Juna A. Kollmeier,, and Anna Moore

TL;DR
This paper demonstrates the use of warm InGaAs sensors for background-limited near-infrared imaging in astronomy, showing comparable performance to traditional cooled IR detectors and enabling cost-effective, high-sensitivity observations.
Contribution
First successful application of warm InGaAs sensors for astronomical imaging, offering a cost-effective alternative to HgCdTe detectors without the need for extensive cooling.
Findings
InGaAs camera achieves background-limited performance at -40C.
Sky brightness in Y band matches dark current, enabling deep imaging.
Successful detection of supernovae, a quasar, and a transiting exoplanet.
Abstract
We describe test observations made with a customized 640 x 512 pixel Indium Gallium Arsenide (InGaAs) prototype astronomical camera on the 100" DuPont telescope. This is the first test of InGaAs as a cost-effective alternative to HgCdTe for research-grade astronomical observations. The camera exhibits an instrument background of 113 e-/sec/pixel (dark + thermal) at an operating temperature of -40C for the sensor, maintained by a simple thermo-electric cooler. The optical train and mechanical structure float at ambient temperature with no cold stop, in contrast to most IR instruments which must be cooled to mitigate thermal backgrounds. Measurements of the night sky using a reimager with plate scale of 0.4 arc seconds / pixel show that the sky flux in Y is comparable to the dark current. At J the sky brightness exceeds dark current by a factor of four, and hence dominates the noise…
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