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Large scale characterization and calibration strategy of a SiPM-based camera for gamma-ray astronomy

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 Added by Cyril Alispach
 Publication date 2020
  fields Physics
and research's language is English




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The SST-1M is a 4-m diameter mirror Davies-Cotton gamma-ray telescope. It has been designed to cover the energy range above 500 GeV and to be part of an array of telescopes separated by 150-200 m. Its innovative camera is featuring large area hexagonal silicon photo-multipliers as photon detectors and a fully digital trigger and readout system. Here, the strategy and the methods for its calibration are presented, together with the obtained results. In particular, the off and on-site calibration strategies are demonstrated on the first camera prototype. The performances of the camera in terms of charge and time resolution are described.



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The next generation of Cherenkov telescope cameras feature Silicon Photo Multipliers (SiPM), which can guarantee excellent performance and allow for observation also under moonlight, increasing duty-cycle and therefore the physics reach. A 4 m-diameter Davies-Cotton prototype telescope with a 9-degree optical FoV and a 1296-pixel SiPM camera, has been designed to meet the requirements of the next generation of ground-based gamma-ray observatories at the highest energies. The large-scale production of the telescopes for array deployment has required the development of a fully automated calibration strategy which relies on a dedicated hardware, the Camera Test Setup (CTS). For each camera pixel, the CTS is equipped with two LEDs, one operated in pulsed mode to reproduce signal and one in continuous mode to reproduce night-sky background. In this contribution we will present the camera calibration strategy, from the laboratory measurement to the on-site monitoring with emphasis on the results obtained with the first camera prototype. In addition, key performances such as charge resolution, time resolution and trigger efficiencies and their degradation with increasing night-sky background level will be presented.
Among the main disadvantages of using silicon photomultipliers (SiPMs) in large experiments are their limited physical area (increasing the cost and the complexity of the readout of a camera) and their sensitivity to unwanted wavelengths. This explains why photomultiplier tubes (PMTs) are still selected for the largest cameras of present and future Very High Energy (VHE) gamma-ray telescopes. These telescopes require photosensors that are sensitive to the fast and dim optical/near-UV Cherenkov radiation emitted due to the interaction of gamma rays with the atmosphere. Here we introduce a low-cost pixel consisting of a SiPM attached to a PMMA disk doped with a wavelength-shifting material, which collects light over a much larger area than standard SiPMs, increases sensitivity to near-UV light and improves background rejection. We also show the measurements performed in the laboratory with a proof-of-concept textit{Light-Trap} pixel that is equipped with a 3$times$3~mm$^2$ SiPM collecting light only in the 300-400~nm band, covering an area $sim$20 times larger than that of the same SiPM itself. We also present results from simulations performed with Geant4 to evaluate its performance. In addition to VHE astronomy, this pixel could have other applications in fields where detection area and cost are critical.
A Silicon Photomultiplier (SiPM)-based photodetector is being built to demonstrate its feasibility for an alternative silicon-based camera design for the Large Size Telescope (LST) of the Cherenkov Telescope Array. It has been designed to match the size of the standard Photomultiplier Tube (PMT) cluster unit and to be compatible with mechanics, electronics and focal plane optics of the first LST camera. Here, we describe the overall SiPM cluster design along with the main differences with respect to the currently used PMT cluster unit. The fast electronics of the SiPM pixel and its layout are also presented. In order to derive the best working condition for the final unit, we measured the SiPM performances in terms of gain, photo-detection efficiency and cross-talk. One pixel, a unit of 14 SiPMs, has been built. We will discuss also some preliminary results regarding this device and we will highlight the future steps of this project.
The single-mirror small-size telescope (SST-1M) is one of the three proposed designs for the small-size telescopes (SSTs) of the Cherenkov Telescope Array (CTA) project. The SST-1M will be equipped with a 4 m-diameter segmented mirror dish and an innovative fully digital camera based on silicon photo-multipliers (SiPMs). Since the SST sub-array will consist of up to 70 telescopes, the challenge is not only to build a telescope with excellent performance, but also to design it so that its components can be commissioned, assembled and tested by industry. In this paper we review the basic steps that led to the design concepts for the SST-1M camera and the ongoing realization of the first prototype, with focus on the innovative solutions adopted for the photodetector plane and the readout and trigger parts of the camera. In addition, we report on results of laboratory measurements on real scale elements that validate the camera design and show that it is capable of matching the CTA requirements of operating up to high-moon-light background conditions.
68 - P. Lv , S.L. Xiong , X.L. Sun 2018
The Gravitational wave high-energy Electromagnetic Counterpart All-sky Monitor (GECAM) project is the planned Chinese space telescope for detecting the X and gamma-ray counterpart. It consists of two micro-satellites in low earth orbit with the advantages of instantaneous full-sky coverage, low energy threshold down to 6 keV and can be achieved within a short period and small budget. Due to the limitation of size, weight and power consumption of micro-satellites, silicon photomultipliers (SiPMs) are used to replace the photomultiplier tubes (PMTs) to assemble a novel gamma-ray detector. A prototype of a SiPM array with LaBr3 crystal is built and tested, and it shows a high detection efficiency (70% at 5.9 keV) and an acceptable uniformity. The low-energy X-ray of 5.9 keV can be detected by a simply readout circuit, and the energy resolution is 6.5% (FWHM) at 662 keV. The design and performance of the detector are discussed in detail in this paper.
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