Beyond CCDs: Characterization of sCMOS detectors for optical astronomy
Aditya Khandelwal, Sarik Jeram, Ryan Dungee, Albert W.K. Lau, Allison, Lau, Ethen Sun, Phil Van-Lane, Shaojie Chen, Aaron Tohuvavohu, Ting S. Li, (University of Toronto)

TL;DR
This study evaluates various high-end sCMOS detectors for optical astronomy, demonstrating their competitive performance, low noise, and suitability as alternatives to traditional CCDs in future astronomical instruments.
Contribution
The paper provides a comprehensive characterization of modern sCMOS detectors, highlighting their performance metrics and potential advantages over CCDs for optical astronomy applications.
Findings
Low dark current and read noise levels across tested detectors
High linearity above 98% in all detectors
Exceptional sensitivity of the Hamamatsu Orca-Quest for photon detection
Abstract
Modern scientific complementary metal-oxide semiconductor (sCMOS) detectors provide a highly competitive alternative to charge-coupled devices (CCDs), the latter of which have historically been dominant in optical imaging. sCMOS boast comparable performances to CCDs with faster frame rates, lower read noise, and a higher dynamic range. Furthermore, their lower production costs are shifting the industry to abandon CCD support and production in favour of CMOS, making their characterization urgent. In this work, we characterized a variety of high-end commercially available sCMOS detectors to gauge the state of this technology in the context of applications in optical astronomy. We evaluated a range of sCMOS detectors, including larger pixel models such as the Teledyne Prime 95B and the Andor Sona-11, which are similar to CCDs in pixel size and suitable for wide-field astronomy.…
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