Initial On-Sky Performance testing of the Single-Photon Imager for Nanosecond Astrophysics (SPINA) system

Abstract

This work presents an initial on-sky performance measurement of the Single-Photon Imager for Nanosecond Astrophysics (SPINA) system, part of our Ultra-Fast Astronomy (UFA) program. We developed the SPINA system based on the position-sensitive silicon photomultiplier (PS-SiPM) detector to record both photoelectron (P.E.) temporal and spatial information. The initial on-sky testing of the SPINA system was successfully performed on UT 2022 Jul 10, on the 0.7-meter aperture Nazarbayev University Transient Telescope at the Assy-Turgen Astrophysical Observatory (NUTTelA-TAO). We measured stars with a wide range of brightness and a dark region of the sky without stars < 18 mag. We measured the SPINA system's spatial resolution to be <232μ m (full-width half-maximum, FWHM), limited by the unstable atmosphere. We measured the total background noise (detector dark counts and sky background) of 1914 counts per second (cps) within this resolution element. We also performed a crosstalk mapping of the detector, obtaining the crosstalk probability of 0.18 near the detector's center while reaching 50\% at the edges. We derived a 5σ sensitivity of 17.45 Gaia-BP magnitude in a 1s exposure with no atmospheric extinction by comparing the received flux with Gaia-BP band data. For a 10ms window and a false alarm rate of once per 100 nights, we derived a transient sensitivity of 14.06 mag. For a 1μ s or faster time scale, we are limited by crosstalk to a 15 P.E. detection threshold. In addition, we demonstrated that the SPINA system is capable of capturing changes in the stellar profile FWHM of 1.8\% and 5\% change in the stellar profile FWHM in 20ms and 2ms exposures, respectively, as well as capturing stellar light curves on the ms and μ s scales.

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