Abstract
Low Light Level CCD (L3-CCD) cameras have received much attention for high cadence astronomical imaging applications. Efforts to date have concentrated on exploiting them for two scenarios: post-exposure image sharpening and lucky imaging, and rapid variability in astrophysically interesting sources. We demonstrate their marked superiority in a third distinct scenario: observing in the high-flux and wide dynamic range regimes. We realized that the unique features of L3-CCDs would make them ideal for maximizing signal-to-noise in observations of bright objects (whether variable or not), and for high dynamic range scenarios such as faint targets embedded in a crowded field of bright objects. Conventional CCDs have drawbacks in such regimes, due to a poor duty cycle - the combination of short exposure times (for time-series sampling or to avoid saturation) and extended readout times (for minimizing readout noise). For different telescope sizes, we use detailed models to show that a range of conventional imaging systems are photometrically out-performed across a wide range of object brightness, once the operational parameters of the L3-CCD are carefully set. The cross-over fluxes, above which the L3-CCD is operationally superior, are surprisingly faint - even for modest telescope apertures. We also show that the use of L3-CCDs is the optimum strategy for minimizing atmospheric scintillation noise in photometric observations employing a given telescope aperture. This is particularly significant, since scintillation can be the largest source of error in timeseries photometry. These results should prompt a new direction in developing imaging instrumentation solutions for observatories.
| Original language | English (Ireland) |
|---|---|
| Title of host publication | UNIVERSE AT SUB-SECOND TIMESCALES: HIGH TIME RESOLUTION ASTROPHYSICS |
| Publication status | Published - 1 Aug 2008 |
Authors (Note for portal: view the doc link for the full list of authors)
- Authors
- Butler, RF,Sheehan, BJ,Phelan, D,Ryan, O,Shearer, A