Such a detector is no longer purely hypothetical.Chris Peterson wrote:I can certainly imagine something like that, although not with a CCD. But you could have some hypothetical new type of detector that output a signal each time a photon hit it, containing the time and coordinates of that event. With such a rich dataset, all sorts of interesting processing would be possible. With a CCD (and other current spatial detectors), however, most of the time information is lost. At best, you can determine that a certain number of photons hit a specific pixel between two known times, where the difference in those times is typically large compared to the time between photon strikes.geckzilla wrote:I have often imagined that some cleverly-written software could selectively reject areas of obvious cosmic ray hits if the data were somehow constantly streaming instead of delivered all at once. This is probably a manifestation of my lack of real understanding about how CCD's work, though.
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