Single Photon Calorimeters

ALT="Diagram of an X-ray single photon calorimeter" SRC="calorimeter_diagram.gif">
Perhaps the most intriguing advance in X-ray astronomy instrumentation in the 1990s has been the development of single photon calorimeters, spearheaded by work at NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center. These devices detect X-rays by the temperature pulses they generate in a small absorber which is cooled to a fraction of a degree kelvin.

Energy Resolution

Single photon calorimeters work by the low-noise conversion of absorbed energy to heat. Such devices consist essentially of an absorber and one or more thermistors, each linked through a load resistor to a low-noise amplifier. The temperature rise induced by the absorption of an X-ray produces a voltage waveform from which energy information can be extracted. The limiting energy resolution is given by the equation delta E = 2.36 x Eta x sqrt(k To2C) where C is the heat capacity (in joules per Kelvin) of the detector at a heat sink temperature To, k is Boltzmann's constant, and eta is a detector constant dependent primarily on the properties of the thermistor. Typically, eta has a value in the range 1-3.

Spatial Resolution

The focal plane coverage of a calorimeter is severely limited by the need to minimize heat capacity. So close-packing, or mosaicing, an array of individual detectors won't work. It may be possible to create an imaging device by using the thermal non-uniformity of a single absorber. However, tests have shown that to produce good spatial resolution requires a high degree of thermal non-uniformity, which then has to be traded against energy resolution.


Back to Learning Center...

Back to Home...

Any Suggestions, mail to: emrah@astroa.physics.metu.edu.tr