Demonstrating sub-electron noise performance in Single electron Sensitive Readout (SiSeRO) devices
Tanmoy Chattopadhyay, Sven Herrmann, Peter Orel, Kevan Donlon, Steven, W. Allen, Marshall W. Bautz, Brianna Cantrall, Michael Cooper, Beverly, LaMarr, Chris Leitz, Eric Miller, R. Glenn Morris, Abigail Y. Pan, Gregory, Prigozhin, Ilya Prigozhin, Haley R. Stueber

TL;DR
This paper demonstrates sub-electron noise performance in SiSeRO devices, a novel on-chip charge detection technology, using enhanced measurement techniques and improved circuitry, paving the way for advanced low-noise imaging in X-ray astronomy.
Contribution
The paper reports the first demonstration of sub-electron noise sensitivity in SiSeRO devices with optimized measurement setup and advanced digital filtering techniques.
Findings
Achieved sub-electron noise sensitivity in SiSeRO devices.
Implemented enhanced RNDR measurement techniques.
Developed improved SiSeRO detectors with optimized amplifiers.
Abstract
Single electron Sensitive Read Out (SiSeRO) is a novel on-chip charge detection technology that can, in principle, provide significantly greater responsivity and improved noise performance than traditional charge coupled device (CCD) readout circuitry. The SiSeRO, developed by MIT Lincoln Laboratory, uses a p-MOSFET transistor with a depleted back-gate region under the transistor channel; as charge is transferred into the back gate region, the transistor current is modulated. With our first generation SiSeRO devices, we previously achieved a responsivity of around 800 pA per electron, an equivalent noise charge (ENC) of 4.5 electrons root mean square (RMS), and a full width at half maximum (FWHM) spectral resolution of 130 eV at 5.9 keV, at a readout speed of 625 Kpixel/s and for a detector temperature of 250 K. Importantly, since the charge signal remains unaffected by the SiSeRO…
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