Characterization of the Cherenkov Photon Background for Low-Noise Silicon Detectors in Space
Manuel E. Gaido, Javier Tiffenberg, Alex Drlica-Wagner, Guillermo Fernandez-Moroni, Bernard J. Rauscher, Fernando Chierchie, Dario Rodrigues, Lucas Giardino, Juan Estrada, and Agustin J. Lapi

TL;DR
This study models Cherenkov radiation from cosmic rays in silicon detectors, assessing its impact as a background noise source for space-based astronomical observations, especially at long wavelengths.
Contribution
It introduces a calibrated model for Cherenkov photon production in silicon detectors and evaluates its significance as a background in space observatories.
Findings
Cherenkov background rate is significant in thick silicon detectors.
Thick detectors outperform thinner ones at long wavelengths despite higher Cherenkov noise.
Masking cosmic-ray tracks optimizes faint source detection.
Abstract
Future space observatories that seek to perform imaging and spectroscopy of faint astronomical sources will require ultra-low-noise detectors that are sensitive over a broad wavelength range. Silicon charge-coupled devices (CCDs), such as EMCCDs, skipper CCDs, multi-amplifier sensing (MAS) CCDs, and single-electron sensitive read out (SiSeRO) CCDs have demonstrated the ability to detect and measure single photons from X-ray energies to near the silicon band gap (~1.1 m), making them candidate technologies for this application. In this context, we study a relatively unexplored source of low-energy background coming from Cherenkov radiation produced by energetic cosmic rays traversing a silicon detector. We present a model for Cherenkov photon production and absorption that is calibrated to laboratory data, and we use this model to characterize the residual background rate for…
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