Sensor characterization for the ULTRASAT space telescope
Benjamin Bastian-Querner, Nirmal Kaipachery, Daniel K\"usters, Julian, Schliwinski, Shay Alfassi, Arooj Asif, Merlin F. Barschke, Sagi Ben-Ami,, David Berge, Adi Birman, Rolf B\"uhler, Nicola De Simone, Amos Fenigstein,, Avishay Gal-Yam, Gianluca Giavitto, Juan M. Haces Crespo

TL;DR
This paper presents a detailed characterization of test sensors for the ULTRASAT space telescope, focusing on their noise, quantum efficiency, and anti-reflective coatings to optimize performance in ultraviolet observations.
Contribution
It provides the first comprehensive analysis of test sensor properties, including noise, quantum efficiency, and coating options, to inform the final sensor design for ULTRASAT.
Findings
Quantum efficiency peaks at 80% at 245 nm with ARC T2.
Temperature-independent noise attributed to on-die IR emission.
ARC T2 offers best out-of-band rejection and in-band performance.
Abstract
The Ultraviolet Transient Astronomical Satellite is a scientific space mission carrying an astronomical telescope. The mission is led by the Weizmann Institute of Science in Israel and the Israel Space Agency, while the camera in the focal plane is designed and built by Deutsches Elektronen Synchrotron in Germany. Two key science goals of the mission are the detection of counterparts to gravitational wave sources and supernovae. The launch to geostationary orbit is planned for 2024. The telescope with a field-of-view of deg, is optimized to work in the near-ultraviolet band between and nm. The focal plane array is composed of four -megapixel, backside-illuminated CMOS sensors with a total active area of 90x90mm. Prior to sensor production, smaller test sensors have been tested to support critical design decisions for the final flight sensor. These…
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