Title: CCD OVERVIEW
1CCD OVERVIEW
- Kepler will have 42 CCDs
- 2,200 column x 1,024 row full frame CCDs
- Field of View (FOV) gt 100 square degrees (113 w/
vignetting)
2DATA SOLAR SYSTEM
- A great deal of information, But
- Single example.
- Biased example We are here!
3KEPLER and The Planet Finder (TPF)
- Excerpts from the National Research Council
(NRC) report with regard to TPF - . TPF will revolutionize major areas of
planetary and non-planetary science - ...it is important to determine prior to the
start of the mission that it is likely that there
will be an adequate number of Earth-sized planets
for TPF to study." (p. 112)
National Research Council
4MORE PLANETARY SCIENCE
- Terrestrial planet multiplicity.
- Terrestrial planet coplanarity ( 12 chance of
seeing both Venus Earth if either is seen). - Single transits of 30 cold Jupiters (SNR 400).
5TRANSIT
- Transit observation by HST of a jovian-size
planet orbiting hd209458
Ten-minute to ten-minute binned data from several
orbits have a precision of 60 ppm (Brown et al.
2001).
6BINARY SEPARATION
7MAIN SEQUENCE STARS
8PLANETS PER DURATION
9KEPLER SPACECRAFT
Sunshade
Photometer
Radiator
Solar Array
Spacecraft
High gain Antenna
10DETECTION CAPABILITIES
11TRANSIT PROPERTIES
12EXPECTED TRANSITS
- EXPECTED NUMBER OF GRAZING TRANSITS BY TARGET
STARS - 50 of target stars are binaries gt 50,000
targets are binaries - 20 have orbital periods of order days to weeks
- 10,000 stars with transit probabilities near 10
- 1000 stars will show stellar transits
- Of these 1,000 stars,
- 6.5 (i.e., 65) stars will show 1 deep
transits - 1.4 (i.e., 14) stars will show 0.1 deep
transits - 0.3 (i.e., 3) stars will show 0.01 deep
transits - 20 have orbital periods between a few months and
a few years - 10,000 stars with transit probabilities near 1
- 100 stars will show stellar transits
- Of these 100 stars
- 6.5 (i.e., 6 ) stars will show 1 deep
transits - 1.4 (i.e., 1.4 ) stars will show 0.1 deep
transits - 0.3 (i.e., 0.3 ) stars will show 0.01 deep
transits
13REQUIRED SENSITIVITY
- ?L/L area Earth/area Sun 1/12,000 8x10-5
- Require total noise to be lt2x10-5 for 4-sigma
detection in 5 hours - Three sources of noise and their contributions
- - Stellar variabilitylt1x10-5, typically for the
Sun on timescale of 1/2 day - - Shot noise1.4x10-5, in 5 hr for mv12
solar-like star and 1-meter aperture - - Instrument noise lt1x10-5, including detector
dark current, electronics read noise, thermal
effects, spacecraft pointing jitter, and
shutterless operation. - Detector of choice array of 422kx1k CCDs with
27µm pixels and dual readout - - Both SITe and EEV are thinned,
back-illuminated, delta-doped, AR coated - Limiting bright magnitude of mv9 and full-well
depth of 825 e-/µm2 requires - - Defocus image to 5 pixel diameter and readout
every 3 seconds.
14MEASUREMENT TECHNIQUE
- Use differential photometry (common mode
rejection) - - Brightness of each star is re-normalized to the
ensemble of thousands of stars in each quadrant
of each CCD, readout with a single amplifier - Transits only last several hours
- - Long term photometric stability not necessary
- Defocus the star image to five pixel diameter
- - Mitigates saturation (109 e-/hr) and
sensitivity to motion - Control pointing to 28 millipixels (0.1 arc sec)
- - Star images remain on the same group of pixels,
eliminates effects of inter-pixel variations in
sensitivity - Operate CCDs near full-well capacity
- - Dark current and read-noise effects become
negligible - Place the photometer in a heliocentric orbit
(SIRTF-like) - - Provides for a very stable thermal and stray
light environment.
15ORGANIZATION
16SINGLE TRANSIT SNRS
- Approximate Single Transit SNR's for a 12th mag
Star
17DETECTABLE SIZE
Detectable planet size vs. Orbital semi-major
axis and star mass
- Each plot is for a given stellar brightness.
Planets of a given size are detectable to the
left of each contour. Detection are based on a
total SNRgt 8 s and gt 3 transits in 4 years.
18DETECTABLE STARS
Number of stars that can be detected vs planet
size as a function of stellar type
The solid lines show the number of dwarf stars of
each spectral type for which a planet of a given
radius can be detected at 8s. These numbers are
based on 4 near-grazing transits with a 1-yr
period and stars with mv lt 14. The dashed lines
show a significant increase in the number of
stars when assuming 4 near-central transits .
19SNR
- SNR as a Function of Transit Duration and Stellar
Variability
The three curves give the SNR for 4 combined
transits about an mv12 solar-like star at times
of low, medium, and high stellar variability.
20DETECTABLE RADIUS
Effect of Stellar Variability on Detectable
Planetary Radius
Earth-sized transits are readily detectable for
stars with variability comparable to that of the
Sun.
21Test bed BRIGHT STAR EFFECT
- Within the planned Kepler Mission field-of-view
there are several stars as bright as mv4. To
simulate the impact of a bright star in the
field, fiber optics were used to generate mv4
stars at various distances from stars in the
field. The effect of a bright star does not raise
the general system noise above the red line noise
limit. Only the nearest star within a few CCD
columns of the mv4 star was significantly
affected. Both its noise and apparent brightness
increase.
22Test bed S/C MOTION EFFECT
- In this 46 hour test the camera was moved at
various amplitudes and rates characteristic of
the spacecraft guidance system performance. The
jitter model used predicted a 1s standard
deviation in pointing of 0.01 arcsec in each
axis, corresponding to 2.8 millipixels on the
CCD. Deviations were typically less than 4s
during the test, i.e., 11 millipixels. - The test results show that the system noise is
still below the maximum allowable noise except
for a small number of deviant stars.
23SUMMARY
- The Kepler Mission is designed to detect hundreds
of Earth-size planets by looking for transits. To
demonstrate the technology to be utilized, a
Testbed Facility has been built and operated with
a flight type CCD. The facility simulates all of
the features of the sky and the
spacecraft/instrument that are important for the
success of the mission. - Optimum operating conditions for defocus,
photometric aperture size vs stellar brightness
and maximum operating temperature have been
measured. - The required photometric precision has been
demonstrated while operating without a shutter
during readout, having some saturated pixels in
the brightest stars, working in a crowded field
with a star density the same as planned for the
mission, inclusion of spacecraft jitter, and over
a dynamic range of five stellar magnitudes. - Tests of comic-ray hits and field rotation (which
occurs every three months during the mission)
also do not appear to have detrimental affects. - Transits have been injected and detected at the
required statistical significance under all
operating conditions during all tests. - The Kepler Mission is ready for flight status.
24SPECTRAL TYPE
25TRANSITS OBSERVED BY VULCAN
HD 209458
Cygnus 3047
Cygnus 3047
Cygnus 937
Perseus 0831
Cygnus 1433
26DETECTION RATE
- Expected detection rate for hot Jupiters
- Probability that
- the target star is dwarf 0.5
- the star is single or a widely space binary 0.5
to 0.8 - the star has a hot Jupiter 0.01 to 0.02
- the orbital plane is correctly aligned 0.1
- six weeks of data show at least three transits
0.6 - Product of the probabilities 1.5 to 4.8 x10-4
- Yield Product of probabilities times number of
stars monitored 1.5x10-4 x 104 stars 1.5 to 5
planets
27VULCAN
Vulcan transit search of 6,000 stars for
extrasolar planets
- OBJECTIVES
- Monitor 6000 stars continuously for periods of
at least 6 weeks - Detect jovian-size planets in short period orbits
- Use Doppler-velocity measurements to determine
mass and density - TELESCOPE
- Aperture 10 cm
- Focal length 30 cm
- Field of View 7x 7 degrees
- Detector 4096x4096 CCD with 9 m pixels