Abstract

Abstract Within an imaging instrument’s field of view, there may be many observational targets of interest. Similarly, within a spectrograph’s bandpass, there may be many emission lines of interest. The brightness of these targets and lines can be orders of magnitude different, which poses a challenge to instrument and mission design. A single exposure can saturate the bright emission and/or have a low signal-to-noise ratio (S/N) for faint emission. Traditional high dynamic range (HDR) techniques solve this problem by either combining multiple sequential exposures of varied duration or splitting the light to different sensors. These methods, however, can result in the loss of science capability, reduced observational efficiency, or increased complexity and cost. The simultaneous HDR method described in this paper avoids these issues by utilizing a special type of detector whose rows can be read independently to define zones that are then composited, resulting in areas with short or long exposure measured simultaneously. We demonstrate this technique for the Sun, which is bright on disk and faint off disk. We emulated these conditions in the lab to validate the method. We built an instrument simulator to demonstrate the method for a realistic solar imager and input. We then calculated S/Ns, finding a value of 45 for a faint coronal mass ejection and 200 for a bright one, both at 3.5  ⊙ N —meeting or far exceeding the international standard for digital photography that defines an S/N of 10 as acceptable and 40 as excellent. Future missions should consider this type of hardware and technique in their trade studies for instrument design.

Highlights

  • Many observational targets present high dynamic range in brightness

  • We demonstrate this technique for the sun, which is bright on disk and faint off disk

  • We present a method to achieve simultaneous high dynamic range (HDR) imaging with a single sensor through spatial partitioning where each region integrates for an independent duration

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Summary

INTRODUCTION

Requires that the dimmer lines be observed separately, necessitating multiple Hubble orbits (e.g., Munoz et al 2020, 2021) – this reduces the observation efficiency of a highly oversubscribed telescope as well as complicates the scientific analysis, which would prefer simultaneous measurements of all of these emission lines. Any science questions targeting a phenomenon that cross from on disk to off (e.g., coronal mass ejections), requires the combination of multiple optimized instruments. This introduces challenges with cross-calibration and coordination, as well as caveats in the conclusions drawn if, for example, different physical structures are being compared due to the observations being in different wavelength regimes. Such is the case with coronal mass ejections (CMEs) observed on disk with EUV but with white light off disk.

SIMULTANEOUS HIGH DYNAMIC RANGE ALGORITHM
LABORATORY VALIDATION
INSTRUMENT SIMULATION WITH SOLAR EXTREME ULTRAVIOLET TARGET
Inputs
Simulation
DISCUSSION
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