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Characterisation and Testing of CHEC-M - a camera prototype for the Small-Sized Telescopes of the Cherenkov Telescope Array

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 Added by Justus Zorn
 Publication date 2018
  fields Physics
and research's language is English




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The Compact High Energy Camera (CHEC) is a camera design for the Small-Sized Telescopes (SSTs; 4 m diameter mirror) of the Cherenkov Telescope Array (CTA). The SSTs are focused on very-high-energy $gamma$-ray detection via atmospheric Cherenkov light detection over a very large area. This implies many individual units and hence cost-effective implementation. CHEC relies on dual-mirror optics to reduce the plate-scale and make use of 6 $times$ 6 mm$^2$ pixels, leading to a low-cost ($sim$150 kEuro), compact (0.5 m $times$ 0.5 m), and light ($sim$45 kg) camera with 2048 pixels providing a camera FoV of $sim$9 degrees. The electronics are based on custom TARGET (TeV array readout with GSa/s sampling and event trigger) ASICs and FPGAs sampling incoming signals at a gigasample per second, with flexible camera-level triggering within a single backplane FPGA. CHEC is designed to observe in the $gamma$-ray energy range of 1$-$300 TeV, and at impact distances up to $sim$500 m. To accommodate this and provide full flexibility for later data analysis, full waveforms with 96 samples for all 2048 pixels can be read out at rates up to $sim$900 Hz. The first prototype, CHEC-M, based on multi-anode photomultipliers (MAPMs) as photosensors, was commissioned and characterised in the laboratory and during two measurement campaigns on a telescope structure at the Paris Observatory in Meudon. In this paper, the results and conclusions from the laboratory and on-site testing of CHEC-M are presented. They have provided essential input on the system design and on operational and data analysis procedures for a camera of this type. A second full-camera prototype based on Silicon photomultipliers (SiPMs), addressing the drawbacks of CHEC-M identified during the first prototype phase, has already been built and is currently being commissioned and tested in the laboratory.



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