by Chris Peterson » Thu Apr 26, 2018 1:54 pm
Guest wrote: ↑Thu Apr 26, 2018 1:44 pm
Chris Peterson wrote: ↑Thu Apr 26, 2018 12:47 pm
RocketRon wrote: ↑Thu Apr 26, 2018 5:48 am
Do the charged particles/cosmic rays only strike the camera ccd with the shutter open, or do they continue regardless. ?
(Which may not be immediately obvious, since with the shutter closed it may not be recording anything )
Always. They strike the sensor from all directions, arriving not just from the side of the lens but even behind. Depending on the sensor type, it may well be "recording" all the time, meaning that it's collecting signal. But often this will not be stored; the charge on the sensor is cleared before starting an actual exposure. However, this is not the case for a special kind of calibration image called a dark frame. It's made with the shutter closed, in order to capture certain artifacts that are inherent in the sensor so that they can be subtracted out of the final science image. However, when you have cosmic ray hits on your dark frame, your calibration process then transfers them to any frames processed with that image.
I think that a second imaging instrument (camera) to provide 'binocular vision' would be helpful. Cosmic rays will only be able to strike one of the imaging surfaces, thereby providing the ability to either remove them from the real image, or give the ability to visualize the 'cosmic rays' without the background image. The cost of the second other camera would have been inconsequential with respect to the cost of the mission, and the science value would be great. It is still a great video effort, tho some scale would have been nice to have. I wonder how cold it is?
In fact, adding a second camera could easily have elevated the cost of the mission by tens of millions of dollars, and would have demanded either a different power system or the loss of some other instrument. Every watt is allocated in probes like this. Cosmic ray hits on sensors are rarely a serious problem, as they can be removed in almost all cases and have minimal impact on the science.
When 67P was at this distance from the Sun, its surface temperature was about 200 K, give or take about 20 K depending on surface location. Say, -70° C. A cold day in Siberia or Antarctica.
[quote=Guest post_id=281872 time=1524750284]
[quote="Chris Peterson" post_id=281864 time=1524746877 user_id=117706]
[quote=RocketRon post_id=281857 time=1524721727]
Do the charged particles/cosmic rays only strike the camera ccd with the shutter open, or do they continue regardless. ?
(Which may not be immediately obvious, since with the shutter closed it may not be recording anything )
[/quote]
Always. They strike the sensor from all directions, arriving not just from the side of the lens but even behind. Depending on the sensor type, it may well be "recording" all the time, meaning that it's collecting signal. But often this will not be stored; the charge on the sensor is cleared before starting an actual exposure. However, this is not the case for a special kind of calibration image called a dark frame. It's made with the shutter closed, in order to capture certain artifacts that are inherent in the sensor so that they can be subtracted out of the final science image. However, when you have cosmic ray hits on your dark frame, your calibration process then transfers them to any frames processed with that image.
[/quote]
I think that a second imaging instrument (camera) to provide 'binocular vision' would be helpful. Cosmic rays will only be able to strike one of the imaging surfaces, thereby providing the ability to either remove them from the real image, or give the ability to visualize the 'cosmic rays' without the background image. The cost of the second other camera would have been inconsequential with respect to the cost of the mission, and the science value would be great. It is still a great video effort, tho some scale would have been nice to have. I wonder how cold it is?
[/quote]
In fact, adding a second camera could easily have elevated the cost of the mission by tens of millions of dollars, and would have demanded either a different power system or the loss of some other instrument. Every watt is allocated in probes like this. Cosmic ray hits on sensors are rarely a serious problem, as they can be removed in almost all cases and have minimal impact on the science.
When 67P was at this distance from the Sun, its surface temperature was about 200 K, give or take about 20 K depending on surface location. Say, -70° C. A cold day in Siberia or Antarctica.