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Low-power high-accuracy micro-digital sun sensor by means of a CMOS image sensor

Authors :
Xie, N. (author)
Theuwissen, A.J.P. (author)
Xie, N. (author)
Theuwissen, A.J.P. (author)
Publication Year :
2013

Abstract

A micro-digital sun sensor (?DSS) is a sun detector which senses a satellite’s instant attitude angle with respect to the sun. The core of this sensor is a system-on-chip imaging chip which is referred to as APS+. The APS+ integrates a CMOS active pixel sensor (APS) array of 368×368??pixels , a 12-bit analog-to-digital converter, and digital signal processing circuits. The ?DSS is designed particularly for microsatellite applications, thus low power consumption is the major design consideration. The APS+ reduces power consumption mainly with profiling and windowing methods which are facilitated by the specific active-pixel design. A prototype of the APS+ which is designed in a standard 0.18-?m CMOS process is presented. The APS+ consumes 21 mW at 10 fps, which is 10 times less than the state of the art. In order to improve noise performance, a reset noise reduction method, quadruple sampling (QS), is implemented. QS reduces the effect of the reset noise compared to the conventional delta double sampling method, even in a 3-transistor active pixel structure. The APS+ obtains an accuracy of 0.01 deg with the QS method.<br />Microelectronics<br />Electrical Engineering, Mathematics and Computer Science

Details

Database :
OAIster
Notes :
English
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1357850102
Document Type :
Electronic Resource
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1117.1.JEI.22.3.033030