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Proceedings of SPIE | 2012

The spectrometer telescope for imaging x-rays on board the Solar Orbiter mission

Arnold O. Benz; Säm Krucker; G. J. Hurford; N.G. Arnold; P. Orleański; H.-P. Gröbelbauer; S. Klober; L. Iseli; H.J. Wiehl; A. Csillaghy; L. Etesi; N. Hochmuth; Marina Battaglia; Martin Bednarzik; R. Resanovic; Oliver Grimm; G. Viertel; V. Commichau; A. Meuris; O. Limousin; S. Brun; N. Vilmer; K.R. Skup; R. Graczyk; M. Stolarski; M. Michalska; W. Nowosielski; A. Cichocki; M. Mosdorf; K. Seweryn

The Spectrometer Telescope for Imaging X-rays (STIX) is one of 10 instruments on board Solar Orbiter, a confirmed Mclass mission of the European Space Agency (ESA) within the Cosmic Vision program scheduled to be launched in 2017. STIX applies a Fourier-imaging technique using a set of tungsten grids (at pitches from 0.038 to 1 mm) in front of 32 pixelized CdTe detectors to provide imaging spectroscopy of solar thermal and non-thermal hard X-ray emissions from 4 to 150 keV. The status of the instrument reviewed in this paper is based on the design that passed the Preliminary Design Review (PDR) in early 2012. Particular emphasis is given to the first light of the detector system called Caliste-SO.


HIGH ENERGY GAMMA-RAY ASTRONOMY: 5th International Meeting on High Energy Gamma-Ray Astronomy | 2012

FACT - The first G-APD Cherenkov telescope (first results)

T. Bretz; D. Dorner; M. Backes; A. Biland; V. Commichau; L. Djambazov; D. Eisenacher; Oliver Grimm; H. von Gunten; D. Hildebrand; T. Krähenbühl; W. Lustermann; E. Lyard; K. Mannheim; D. Neise; A. Overkemping; A. Paravac; F. Pauss; W. Rhode; M. Ribordy; U. Röser; J.-P. Stucki; F. Temme; J. Thaele; S. Tobler; P. Vogler; R. Walter; Q. Weitzel; M. Zänglein

In October 2011, the first air-Cherenkov telescope utilizing Geiger-mode avalanche photodiodes commenced operations. The silicon-based devices display several advantages compared to classical photomultiplier tubes allowing for a more compact camera design of higher reliability, lower power consumption and bias voltage, and better prospects for improving the photon detection efficiency. Here, the first physics results are presented from a few months of data taking. Although still preliminary, the results already show a superb fidelity of the data, demonstrating the potential of avalanche photodiodes for ground-based gamma ray astronomy. The stability and high sensitivity are ideal for remote monitoring observations of variable gamma-ray sources.


Journal of Instrumentation | 2012

The front-end electronics of the Spectrometer Telescope for Imaging X-Rays (STIX) on the ESA Solar Orbiter satellite

Oliver Grimm; M Bednarzik; V. Commichau; R Graczyk; H P Gröbelbauer; G. Hurford; S. Krucker; O. Limousin; A. Meuris; P Orleański; A Przepiórka; Karol Seweryn; Konrad R. Skup; G. Viertel

Solar Orbiter is an ESA mission to study the heliosphere in proximity to the Sun, scheduled for launch in January 2017. It carries a suite of ten instruments for comprehensive remote-sensing and in-situ measurements.The Spectrometer Telescope for Imaging X-Rays (STIX), one of the remote sensing instruments, images X-rays between 4 and 150keV using an Fourier technique. The angular resolution is 7 arcsec and the spectral resolution 1keV full-width-half-maximum at 6keV. X-ray detection uses pixelized Cadmium Telluride crystals provided by the Paul Scherrer Institute. The crystals are bonded to read-out hybrids developed by CEA Saclay, called Caliste-SO, incorporating a low-noise, low-power analog front-end ASIC IDeF-X HD. The crystals are cooled to -20°C to obtain very low leakage currents of less than 60pA per pixel, the prerequisite for obtaining the required spectral resolution.This article briefly describes the mission goals and then details the front-end electronics design and main challenges, resulting in part from the allocation limit in mass of 7kg and in power of 4W. Emphasis is placed on the design influence of the cooling requirement within the warm environment of a mission approaching the Sun to within the orbit of Mercury. The design for the long-term in-flight energy calibration is also explained.


Proceedings of SPIE | 2014

Caliste-SO: the x-ray spectrometer unit of the STIX instrument onboard the Solar Orbiter space mission

Aline Meuris; Olivier Limousin; O. Gevin; M.C. Vassal; F. Soufflet; Nicolas Fiant; Martin Bednarzik; Christopher Wild; Stefan Stutz; Guy Birrer; C. Blondel; Isabelle Le Mer; Duc-Dat Huynh; Modeste Donati; Oliver Grimm; V. Commichau; G. J. Hurford; Säm Krucker; François Gonzalez; Marc Billot

Caliste-SO is a hybrid detector integrating in a volume of 12 × 14 × 18 mm3 a 1 mm-thick CdTe pixel detector, a frontend IDeF-X HD ASIC and passive parts to perform high resolution spectroscopy in the 4-200 keV energy range with high count rate capability (104-105 photons/s/cm2). The detector hybridization concept was designed by CEA and 3DPlus to realize CdTe cameras for space astronomy missions with various pixel patterns. For the STIX instrument onboard the Solar Orbiter mission, the imaging system is made by 32 collimators that sample the visibilities of the spatial Fourier transform and doesn’t require fine pitch pixels. The Al-Schottky CdTe detectors produced by Acrorad are then patterned and tested by the Paul Scherrer Institute to produce 12 pixels surrounded by a guard ring within 1 cm2. Electrical and spectroscopic performance tests of the Caliste-SO samples are performed in France at key manufacturing steps, before sending the samples to the principal investigator to mount them in the Detector Electronics Module of STIX in front of each collimator. Four samples were produced in 2013 to be part of the STIX engineering model. Best pixels show an energy resolution of 0.7 keV FWHM at 6 keV (1 keV resolution requirement for STIX) and a low-level detection threshold below 3 keV (4 keV requirement for STIX). The paper describes the design and the production of Caliste-SO and focuses on main performance tests performed so far to characterize the spectrometer unit.


Journal of Instrumentation | 2015

Performance and qualification of CdTe pixel detectors for the Spectrometer/Telescope for Imaging X-rays

Oliver Grimm; Martin Bednarzik; Guy Birrer; N. Arnold; V. Commichau; G. Hurford; S. Krucker; O. Limousin; A. Meuris

The Spectrometer/Telescope for Imaging X-rays (STIX) is a remote sensing instrument on-board the ESA Solar Orbiter spacecraft. STIX is designated to the study of energetic phenomena in solar flares. A Fourier-imaging technique using tungsten grid collimators in front of CdTe pixel detectors is employed, covering the 4 to 150 keV energy range with a full-width-half maximum resolution around 1 keV at low energies. Acrorad CdTe detectors of 1 mm thickness with a planar aluminum Schottky contact are used as basis for a subsequent patterning process into eight large pixels, four small pixels, and a guard ring. The patterning is done by means of microfabrication technologies. The area of the patterned sensor is 10×10 mm2. Test equipment has been developed for selecting the detectors with best performance prior to integration with the read-out system, and for qualification purposes. The set-up allows pixel-based dark current measurements at low temperatures. Pixel dark currents below 60 pA are needed to avoid excess noise in the read-out ASIC. The best pixels show dark currents below 10 pA at 300 V bias and −20 °C. Spectroscopic measurements with 133Ba sources confirm the good performance. This paper briefly explains the mission context of the CdTe detectors and then gives details of the production and testing procedures. Typical results are shown, with emphasis on performance degradation studies from displacement damage by proton irradiation. This is expected to be the dominant degradation mechanism for this application.


Journal of Instrumentation | 2012

Electronics for the camera of the First G-APD Cherenkov Telescope (FACT) for ground based gamma-ray astronomy

H. Anderhub; M. Backes; A. Biland; A. Boller; I. Braun; T. Bretz; V. Commichau; L. Djambazov; D. Dorner; C. Farnier; A. Gendotti; Oliver Grimm; H. von Gunten; D. Hildebrand; U. Horisberger; B. Huber; K.-S. Kim; J.H. Kohne; T. Krähenbühl; B. Krumm; M. Lee; Jean-Philippe Lenain; E. Lorenz; W. Lustermann; E. Lyard; K. Mannheim; M. Meharga; D. Neise; F. Nessi-Tedaldi; A. Overkemping

Within the FACT project, we construct a new type of camera based on Geiger-mode avalanche photodiodes (G-APDs). Compared to photomultipliers, G-APDs are more robust, need a lower operation voltage and have the potential of higher photon-detection efficiency and lower cost, but were never fully tested in the harsh environments of Cherenkov telescopes. The FACT camera consists of 1440 G-APD pixels and readout channels, based on the DRS4 (Domino Ring Sampler) analog pipeline chip and commercial Ethernet components. Preamplifiers, trigger system, digitization, slow control and power converters are integrated into the camera.


Nuclear Instruments & Methods in Physics Research Section A-accelerators Spectrometers Detectors and Associated Equipment | 2013

The spectrometer/telescope for imaging X-rays on board the ESA Solar Orbiter spacecraft

Säm Krucker; Arnold O. Benz; G.J. Hurford; N.G. Arnold; P. Orleański; H.-P. Gröbelbauer; D. Casadei; S. Kobler; L. Iseli; H.J. Wiehl; A. Csillaghy; L. Etesi; N. Hochmuth; Marina Battaglia; Martin Bednarzik; R. Resanovic; Oliver Grimm; G. Viertel; V. Commichau; Andrew W. Howard; A. Meuris; O. Limousin; S. Brun; N. Vilmer; K.R. Skup; R. Graczyk; M. Stolarski; M. Michalska; W. Nowosielski; A. Cichocki


Nuclear Instruments & Methods in Physics Research Section A-accelerators Spectrometers Detectors and Associated Equipment | 2009

First Avalanche-photodiode Camera Test (FACT): A novel Camera using G-APDs for the Observation of very high-energy -Rays with Cherenkov Telescopes

I. Braun; S. Commichau; M. Rissi; M. Backes; A. Biland; T. Bretz; I. Britvitch; V. Commichau; H. von Gunten; D. Hildebrand; U. Horisberger; D. Kranich; E. Lorenz; W. Lustermann; K. Mannheim; D. Neise; F. Pauss; M. Pohl; Dieter Renker; W. Rhode; U. Röser; U. Straumann; G. Viertel


arXiv: Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics | 2013

FACT - The first G-APD Cherenkov telescope: Status and results

T. Bretz; H. Anderhub; M. Backes; A. Biland; A V. Boccone; I. Braun; Jens Buss; F. Cadoux; V. Commichau; L. Djambazov; D. Dorner; S. Einecke; D. Eisenacher; A. Gendotti; Oliver Grimm; H. von Gunten; C. Haller; D. Hildebrand; U. Horisberger; B. Huber; M. L. Knoetig; T. Kr; B. Krumm; Manwoo Lee; E. Lorenz; W. Lustermann; E. Lyard; K. Mannheim; M. Meharga; K. Meier


Nuclear Instruments & Methods in Physics Research Section A-accelerators Spectrometers Detectors and Associated Equipment | 2015

Caliste-SO, a CdTe based spectrometer for bright solar event observations in hard X-rays

A. Meuris; O. Limousin; O. Gevin; C. Blondel; J. Martignac; M.C. Vassal; F. Soufflet; N. Fiant; Martin Bednarzik; Stefan Stutz; Oliver Grimm; V. Commichau

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K. Mannheim

University of Würzburg

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