Astronomical Spectroscopy with Skipper CCDs: First Results from a Skipper CCD Focal Plane Prototype at SIFS
Edgar Marrufo Villalpando, Alex Drlica-Wagner, Brandon Roach, Marco, Bonati, Abhishek Bakshi, Julia Campa, Gustavo Cancelo, Braulio Cancino,, Claudio R. Chavez, Fernando Chierchie, Juan Estrada, Guillermo Fernandez, Moroni, Luciano Fraga, Manuel E. Gaido, Stephen E. Holland

TL;DR
This paper reports the first on-sky results of a Skipper CCD focal plane prototype optimized for ultra-low-noise astronomical spectroscopy, demonstrating high quantum efficiency, sub-electron noise, and successful observation of faint celestial objects.
Contribution
It introduces a novel Skipper CCD focal plane for astronomy, achieving unprecedented low readout noise and high efficiency in on-sky spectroscopic observations.
Findings
Achieved sub-electron readout noise (~0.5 e- rms) in a large pixel region.
Successfully observed faint quasars and galaxies, demonstrating detector sensitivity.
Enhanced signal-to-noise ratio for faint spectral features in astronomical data.
Abstract
We present the first on-sky results from an ultra-low-readout-noise Skipper CCD focal plane prototype for the SOAR Integral Field Spectrograph (SIFS). The Skipper CCD focal plane consists of four 6k x 1k, 15 m pixel, fully-depleted, p-channel devices that have been thinned to ~250 m, backside processed, and treated with an anti-reflective coating. These Skipper CCDs were configured for astronomical spectroscopy, i.e., single-sample readout noise < 4.3 e- rms/pixel, the ability to achieve multi-sample readout noise 1 e- rms/pixel, full-well capacities ~40,000-65,000 e-, low dark current and charge transfer inefficiency (~2 x 10 e-/pixel/s and 3.44 x 10, respectively), and an absolute quantum efficiency of 80% between 450 nm and 980 nm ( 90% between 600 nm and 900 nm). We optimized the readout sequence timing to achieve sub-electron noise…
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