| Type | Loral/Lesser, Thinned, AR coated, UV flooded, MPP chip |
| Controller | ESO-FIERA |
| CCD Size | 2048 x 2048 |
| Image Size | 2060 x 2060 (overscan inadequate for bias subtraction) |
| Pixel Size | 15 microns x 15 microns ; 0.12 arcsec x 0.12 arcsec |
| Field Size | 4.1 arcmin x 4.1 arcmin (vignetting in corners, ~8% of detector area) |
| Full well capacity | 104,000 electrons/pixel |
| Dark Current | 7 electrons/pixel/hour |
| Saturation | 65535 ADU |
| Linearity regime | 0.25% (maximum deviation) |
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Note : The CCD is monitored regularly and the latest results, as well as the evolution of its properties (bias, gain, linearity, noise, etc.) may be seen on the CCD tests pages below.
Following the links below will lead to results from the latest tests conducted on the CCD using a Beta light (radio active source). The values monitored include bias, gain, readout noise, linearity, shutter error, etc. The pages also display evolution of the values over the last couple of years. The first set of links will take you to the new dynamical pages, with the most recent results, while the other links are for historical information only.
| Current CCD#40 Left Amplifier - Dynamic Monitoring Pages on wiki internal page |
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| Current CCD#40 Left Amplifier - |
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| CCD#40 Right Amplifier. Not in use since 21 March 2003 |
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Even in case of very strong "super-saturation" during a particular exposure the CCD recovers quite well with little remanence. In the worst case, in our experience, taking 3-5 biases will completely remove any lingering residuals.
The default orientation produces an image with north towards the top and east towards the right (i.e. flipped in the x direction compared with the sky). See the Adaptor page for more details and instructions on how to change this orientation. Note that the real-time display can flip the image back to North up and East left for comparison with finding charts, although the interaction with MIDAS (e.g. for centering targets on slits) must be done in frames displayed as they appear on the CCD.
A spectrum is always produced with the slit (or slitlets) aligned parallel to the horizontal axis (x-axis) and the spectral dispersion along the vertical axis (y-axis). The wavelength increases as one goes from bottom to top.
In spectroscopy, regular internal flat fields are sufficient to take out the fringing from the science spectra. In imaging, one needs sky/dome flats as well as a fringe flat made from combining the science frames (the super flat) to eliminate the fringes.
Click on the image for a larger version
So a 1 second exposure will reduce the position dependent error to less than 1% while a 3 second exposure will reduce the shutter delay error to the same level. At this stage the final photometric errors (typically 5-10% for EFOSC2) will be dominated by contributions from other factors.
Thus flat fields should not be taken with an exposure of less than a second - in fact, the observing procedure does not allow it. However, we recommend a minimum exposure of 5 seconds, and for dome flats generally use exposures times > 10 secconds.
Unless the scientific goal specifically requires otherwise we strongly recommend use of 2x2 binned mode - the main advantage is the higher read-out speed. The smaller image sizes is also an advantage though not a major issue in these times of disk space profligacy! It should also be noted that one can execute a sequence of 5 twilight imaging flats in only 1 band if 1x1 binning is used.
Unequal binning along the X and Y directions is possible. However use it at your own risk as routine CCD tests are not yet done in this mode. Make sure that enough calibration data is taken. It is planned to offer unequal binning with various combinations up to 4x for spectroscopy with EFOSC at the NTT, but this has not yet been commissioned.
The Fast mode is about a factor of 2 faster than the Normal mode and the read-out noise is only a couple of ADU higher. However, two different amplifiers are used during the read-out and the 2 halves in effect behave like different chips with different calibrations (bias etc). It may be noted that the time difference between the Normal and Fast read-out modes (~15 seconds) is only a very small fraction of the total time overheads and so it usually doesn't save much time in practical terms.
However the fast mode with CCD windowing is an option for fast photometry of variable stars.