Intensified charge-coupled device

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An intensified charge-coupled device (ICCD, English for "amplified charge-coupled device") is an image sensor that consists of a charge-coupled device (CCD) to which a microchannel plate is coupled by fiber optics to increase sensitivity. The front photocathode of the microchannel plate picks up the image, converts the incoming photons into electrons , which are amplified when passing through the microchannel plate and converted back into photons on a fluorescent screen on the back . These are transmitted - pixel by pixel - through the fiber optics to the CCD. With ICCDs it is possible to detect single photons.

ICCD are used, for example, in night vision devices , in astronomical observation and in fluorescence microscopy , and here they compete with the electron multiplying CCD . A particular advantage of the ICCD is the possibility of being able to switch the amplification of the microchannel plate quickly, whereby a very fast, electronic control of the exposure time can be realized, down to 200 picoseconds .

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. sub-nanosecond optical gating and irising properties of different types of microchannel plate image intensifiers (MCPII) . SPIE. Accessed in 1999.