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Commentary: JWST near-infrared detector degradation— finding the problem, fixing the problem, and moving forward

Authors :
Bernard J. Rauscher
Carl Stahle
Robert J. Hill
Matthew Greenhouse
James Beletic
Sachidananda Babu
Peter Blake
Keith Cleveland
Emmanuel Cofie
Bente Eegholm
C. W. Engelbracht
Donald N. B. Hall
Alan Hoffman
Basil Jeffers
Christine Jhabvala
Randy A. Kimble
Stanley Kohn
Robert Kopp
Don Lee
Henning Leidecker
Don Lindler
Robert E. McMurray Jr.
Karl Misselt
D. Brent Mott
Raymond Ohl
Judith L. Pipher
Eric Piquette
Dan Polis
Jim Pontius
Marcia Rieke
Roger Smith
W. E. Tennant
Liqin Wang
Yiting Wen
Christopher N. A. Willmer
Majid Zandian
Source :
AIP Advances, Vol 2, Iss 2, Pp 021901-021901-18 (2012)
Publication Year :
2012
Publisher :
AIP Publishing LLC, 2012.

Abstract

The James Webb Space Telescope (JWST) is the successor to the Hubble Space Telescope. JWST will be an infrared-optimized telescope, with an approximately 6.5 m diameter primary mirror, that is located at the Sun-Earth L2 Lagrange point. Three of JWST’s four science instruments use Teledyne HgCdTe HAWAII-2RG (H2RG) near infrared detector arrays. During 2010, the JWST Project noticed that a few of its 5 μm cutoff H2RG detectors were degrading during room temperature storage, and NASA chartered a “Detector Degradation Failure Review Board” (DD-FRB) to investigate. The DD-FRB determined that the root cause was a design flaw that allowed indium to interdiffuse with the gold contacts and migrate into the HgCdTe detector layer. Fortunately, Teledyne already had an improved design that eliminated this degradation mechanism. During early 2012, the improved H2RG design was qualified for flight and JWST began making additional H2RGs. In this article, we present the two public DD-FRB “Executive Summaries” that: (1) determined the root cause of the detector degradation and (2) defined tests to determine whether the existing detectors are qualified for flight. We supplement these with a brief introduction to H2RG detector arrays, some recent measurements showing that the performance of the improved design meets JWST requirements, and a discussion of how the JWST Project is using cryogenic storage to retard the degradation rate of the existing flight spare H2RGs.

Subjects

Subjects :
Physics
QC1-999

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
21583226
Volume :
2
Issue :
2
Database :
Directory of Open Access Journals
Journal :
AIP Advances
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
edsdoj.71242a0bdc544615a6836e11af283b17
Document Type :
article
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1063/1.4733534