X-ray speed reading with the MCRC: prototype success and next generation upgrades
Peter Orel, Abigail Y. Pan, Sven Herrmann, Tanmoy Chattopadhyay, Glenn, Morris, Haley Stueber, Steven W. Allen, Daniel Wilkins, Gregory Prigozhin,, Beverly LaMarr, Richard Foster, Andrew Malonis, Marshall W. Bautz, Michael J., Cooper, and Kevan Donlon

TL;DR
This paper presents the successful development and testing of a high-speed, low-noise, radiation-hard ASIC for X-ray detector readout, demonstrating prototype performance and outlining next-generation upgrades for future X-ray missions.
Contribution
The paper introduces the MCRC-V1.0 ASIC prototype with high performance and low power, and discusses its radiation hardness and potential for next-generation X-ray detector readout systems.
Findings
MCRC-V1.0 ASIC achieves high speed and low noise performance.
The ASIC demonstrates radiation hardness up to 25 krad.
Next iteration will increase channel count and interface capabilities.
Abstract
The Advanced X-ray Imaging Satellite (AXIS) is a NASA probe class mission concept designed to deliver arcsecond resolution with an effective area ten times that of Chandra (at launch). The AXIS focal plane features an MIT Lincoln Laboratory (MIT-LL) X-ray charge-coupled device (CCD) detector working in conjunction with an application specific integrated circuit (ASIC), denoted the Multi-Channel Readout Chip (MCRC). While this readout ASIC targets the AXIS mission, it is applicable to a range of potential X-ray missions with comparable readout requirements. Designed by the X-ray astronomy and Observational Cosmology (XOC) group at Stanford University, the MCRC ASIC prototype (MCRC-V1.0) uses a 350 nm technology node and provides 8 channels of high speed, low noise, low power consumption readout electronics. Each channel implements a current source to bias the detector output driver, a…
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