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Characterization and Quantum Efficiency Determination of Monocrystalline Silicon Solar Cells as Sensors for Precise Flux Calibration

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arxiv 2108.09974 v1 pith:VED5ASLR submitted 2021-08-23 astro-ph.IM

Characterization and Quantum Efficiency Determination of Monocrystalline Silicon Solar Cells as Sensors for Precise Flux Calibration

classification astro-ph.IM
keywords cellssolarcalibrationefficiencyfluxlinearitymonocrystallinephotodetectors
verification ladder T0 review T1 audit T2 compute T3 formal T4 reserved
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As the precision frontier of astrophysics advances towards the one millimagnitude level, flux calibration of photometric instrumentation remains an ongoing challenge. We present the results of a lab-bench assessment of the viability of monocrystalline silicon solar cells to serve as large-aperture (up to 125mm diameter), high-precision photodetectors. We measure the electrical properties, spatial response uniformity, quantum efficiency (QE), and frequency response of 3$^{rd}$ generation C60 solar cells, manufactured by Sunpower. Our new results, combined with our previous study of these cells' linearity, dark current, and noise characteristics, suggest that these devices hold considerable promise, with QE and linearity that rival those of traditional, small-aperture photodiodes. We argue that any photocalibration project that relies on precise knowledge of the intensity of a large-diameter optical beam should consider using solar cells as calibrating photodetectors.

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