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This page provides a jumpstation for a variety of web resources appropriate to the development and use of CCDs in professional astronomy. I make occasional searches of the web in an attempt to keep it complete and up to date.
If you have a link you would like me to add to this page, please let me know
These links are listed in no particular order.
The
CFHT detector group pages, and a prescription for in-situ
testing
ESO
-- ESO's Optical Detector Team pages.
UCO/Lick,
Santa Cruz -- Richard Stover & Co. have some interesting stuff
on Orbit CCDs, including a 2Kx4K device.
NAO,
Japan: CCDs for Subaru - comparison of several different brands
of 2kx4k CCDs, including EEV, SITe, MIT and Hamamatsu.
Berkeley
Lab - UCO/Lick - High-resistivity CCD colaboration documents.
Steward
Observatory -- Mike Lesser's thinning lab. Look here for QE curves
- modelled and real. A how-to on UV flooding too. The new page, still under
development, is here
IfA,
Hawaii -- Gerry Luppino's gang. (Gerry makes purple dewars).
Cambridge,
UK -- Paddy Oates is the CCD world's problem page agony aunt.
San
Diego, CA -- Bob Leach & Co. are well organised, with an online
manual for the SDSU CCD controller and in-depth information on a couple
of Loral devices.
Sternwarte
der Universität Bonn -- Ralph Kohley's info on CTE measurement,
pocket-pumping and anti-blooming clocking.
Mount
Stromlo and Siding Springs -- Bill Roberts describes the MSSSO
CCD user interface
CTIO
-- Alistair Walker maintains the Tololo CCD pages, and there's a pointer
to info on the Arcon controller.
Catania
Observatory -- Giovanni Bonanno's lab has a comprehensive description
of their operation.
The
University of Oregon, Dept. of Physics provides a basic CCD Q
& A page.
Maki Sekiguchi's Sloane
Digital Sky Survey imaging camera database
The guys at the Danish IJAF
have a bunch of CCDs and some info on MTF measurement and washing CCDs.
The
delta-doped CCD from Shouleh Nikzad at JPL
Observatoire
Haute-Provence offers some info on an EEV 42-20 CCD
SITe
-- a commercial CCD foundry and provider (detectors, other useful information).
EEV
-- a commercial CCD foundry and provider (Detectors, cameras).
PixelVision
-- a commercial CCD imaging system provider (includes some useful notes
and tutorials).
Thomson
CSF -- a commercial CCD provider (product list).
Spectral
Instruments in Tucson make high end, turnkey systems, up to 16
bits/pixel and LN2 or closed-cycle dewars.
SBIG
and AstroCam
make commercial CCD systems.
CCD
Astronomy Magazine (no longer published)
Apogee
Instruments make a high-end, off-the-shelf system and offer the
"CCD University"
with some introductory on-line tutorials about CCD technology.
Photometrics
make high-end CCD camera systems.
Philips
make CCDs up to 7kx9k pixels.
Proscan
elektronische Systeme GmbH also produce slow-scan cameras, using
Thomson CSF CCDs with up to 2048x2048 pixels, 5 MHz readout rate and 12
bits deep. (2 MHz at 14 bits).
Andor
Technology offer a selection of TE-cooled cameras.
Hamamatsu
detectors
and cameras
Starlight
Xpress -- turnkey slowscan systems & software
John
McDonald offers another page of CCD links
Bonner
Denton's page is curiously short of content on the subject of his favourite
hobby (screaming across the desert in cars that do passable impressions
of airplanes without wings, jet airplanes), but he does have a list
of CCD resources
The
Cookbook Camera Home Page tells you what some of the more advanced
amateurs are up to these days. (They're catching up guys!)
Tybee
Evans offers a long list of links and information, mostly for amateurs,
but plenty of useful stuff for the professional.
GSFC
Materials engineering has a bunch of information on vacuum outgassing
of various materials.
NASA
Ames CryoGroup for everything on snazzy new pusle-tube cryocoolers
from a layman's intro to theoretical analyses.
A
CCD laboratory class from Robert Mutel at The University of Iowa
A
CCD laboratory class from Peter McCullough at The University of Illinois
More on CCDs at Oregon
Apogee's "CCD
University"
Some brief
notes from the Virginia Military Institute
Lucent's
article documenting the invention of CCDs, includes background on Tony
Tyson and the big throughput camera.
The CFHT
detectors page and the CFHT homepage
are the first ports of call for everything you wanted to know about CFHT.
You might find my CCD
testing cookbook useful. A postscript
version is available (caveat: it's still evolving; this version is
not site-specific). Here is the ADASS
III paper (0.5 Mbyte postscript file), I wrote with Rein Warmels on
the systematic, in situ testing of ESO, La Silla CCDs, and this
is the poster (0.6 Mbyte postscript
file) that we presented at the actual meeting (well, Rein did; I didn't
go -- busy, busy, busy...).
I reduce much of my CCD time series stuff with Stellar Photometry Software by Jim Heasley and Ken Janes. (This page appears to have evaporated.)
I also use IDL for general purpose data reduction and analysis.
And I mustn't forget IRAF, which is a data reduction package specifically for reducing Astronomical data (everyone uses it.
ESO has a page of data reduction and analysis tools, including MIDAS, Eclipse and Skycat.