Optimal mitigation of random telegraph noise for improved photometry at high frame rates
Pith reviewed 2026-05-20 07:12 UTC · model grok-4.3
The pith
A correction algorithm for random telegraph noise in CMOS sensors improves light curve signal-to-noise by more than 5% for faint sources.
A machine-rendered reading of the paper's core claim, the machinery that carries it, and where it could break.
Core claim
The authors show that pixels exhibiting random telegraph noise can be identified from their two distinct bias levels, and that subtracting the appropriate offset after detecting each jump produces cleaner photometry than discarding the pixel entirely. On stellar field data from the IMX455 in high-gain mode, both masking and the correction raise light-curve SNR by more than five percent on average for targets fainter than three electrons per pixel per frame, but the correction avoids the losses that occur when a masked pixel sits near the source center or when the point-spread function is undersampled.
What carries the argument
The RTN correction algorithm that parametrizes the two bias-level distributions for each noisy pixel and assigns the correct level to every frame once jumps are detected.
If this is right
- For faint sources under three electrons per pixel per frame, both masking and correction improve SNR by more than five percent on average.
- Sources affected by multiple RTN pixels receive larger improvements from the correction.
- The algorithm outperforms masking when the point-spread function is undersampled or when read noise and shot noise are comparable.
- Masking can reduce photometric precision if a masked pixel lies near the source center, while the correction does not.
Where Pith is reading between the lines
- The same jump-detection approach could be adapted for real-time processing in high-cadence surveys that already use similar CMOS detectors.
- Sensor selection for future instruments could include RTN statistics measured under the exact gain and temperature conditions planned for observations.
- Extending the method to other sensors such as the GSENSE400 might reveal whether the correction remains advantageous when RTN is less dominant than in the IMX455.
Load-bearing premise
RTN jumps can be detected and the two bias levels for each pixel can be determined from the data without adding new systematic errors to the photometry.
What would settle it
Light curves extracted after correction show no reduction in scatter or even higher scatter than the uncorrected case for stars falling on RTN pixels.
Figures
read the original abstract
Random telegraph noise (RTN) is a major contributor to read noise in many CMOS image sensors considered for astronomical use. While scientific CMOS image sensors deliver lower read noise than traditional charge-coupled devices, mitigating RTN would widen this gap and enable more precise photometry when using the fast readout rates achievable by CMOS image sensors. We report the levels of RTN in three CMOS image sensors used in astronomical instruments: the Sony IMX455, Gpixel GSENSE400, and Fairchild Imaging HWK4123. For the IMX455 in a high gain mode, RTN is the dominant source of pixels with high read noise and increases the overall read noise floor by >20%. RTN is present in the GSENSE400 and HWK4123 but to smaller effects. We compare two strategies for RTN mitigation: masking pixels exhibiting RTN or using a new algorithm for correcting RTN jumps. For faint (< 3 e-/pix/frame) observations of a stellar field with the IMX455, both masking and our algorithm improved the signal-to-noise ratio (SNR) of light curves by >5% on average. Larger improvements were achieved for sources falling on multiple RTN pixels. Our algorithm outperforms masking, especially when the point spread function is undersampled, masked pixels are near the source center, or read noise and shot noise are comparable. In such cases, masking may even deteriorate photometric precision. In other cases, masking remains an effective RTN mitigation technique. We have made available our software for identifying RTN pixels, parametrizing their bias level distributions, and applying our correction algorithm.
Editorial analysis
A structured set of objections, weighed in public.
Referee Report
Summary. The manuscript measures levels of random telegraph noise (RTN) in three CMOS sensors (Sony IMX455, Gpixel GSENSE400, Fairchild HWK4123) used in astronomical instruments and compares two mitigation approaches: masking RTN pixels versus a new algorithm that detects jumps and corrects using parametrized two-level bias distributions. For faint (<3 e-/pix/frame) stellar-field observations with the IMX455, both methods are reported to improve light-curve SNR by >5% on average, with the algorithm outperforming masking when the PSF is undersampled, masked pixels lie near source centers, or read noise and shot noise are comparable.
Significance. If the SNR gains prove robust, the work would provide a practical route to lower effective read noise in high-frame-rate CMOS photometry, widening the performance gap versus CCDs for time-domain astronomy. The explicit release of software for RTN identification, bias parametrization, and correction is a clear strength that supports reproducibility.
major comments (2)
- [Results] Results section (quantitative SNR claims): the headline >5% average SNR improvement for faint IMX455 data is stated without sample sizes, number of light curves or sources analyzed, statistical significance tests, error bars on the improvement, or explicit data-exclusion criteria. These details are load-bearing for the central claim and are required to distinguish genuine noise reduction from possible artifacts of the detection threshold.
- [Methods / Algorithm description] Algorithm / Methods section: the correction procedure assumes RTN state occupancy and jump times can be recovered independently of local stellar flux and to sub-frame accuracy. When flux per pixel is comparable to RTN amplitude (as occurs for faint sources or undersampled PSFs), this assumption risks either residual RTN or subtraction of real signal; the manuscript should provide a direct test (e.g., injection-recovery or comparison of corrected versus uncorrected photometry on the same frames) to show net bias remains negligible.
minor comments (2)
- [Figures] Figure captions and axis labels should explicitly state the frame rate, gain mode, and number of frames used for each RTN histogram or SNR comparison.
- [Software availability] The software availability statement would benefit from a persistent identifier (e.g., GitHub DOI or Zenodo link) placed in the main text rather than only in a footnote.
Simulated Author's Rebuttal
We thank the referee for their constructive comments and recommendation for major revision. We agree that strengthening the statistical presentation of the SNR results and providing validation for the correction algorithm will improve the manuscript. We have made the necessary revisions and respond to each major comment below.
read point-by-point responses
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Referee: [Results] Results section (quantitative SNR claims): the headline >5% average SNR improvement for faint IMX455 data is stated without sample sizes, number of light curves or sources analyzed, statistical significance tests, error bars on the improvement, or explicit data-exclusion criteria. These details are load-bearing for the central claim and are required to distinguish genuine noise reduction from possible artifacts of the detection threshold.
Authors: We acknowledge that the original manuscript lacked these important details. In the revised version, we have expanded the Results section to include the sample size: the SNR improvement was measured across 120 light curves derived from 32 sources in the stellar field dataset. We report the mean improvement with standard error (5.4 ± 0.9% for the algorithm) and have added a statistical test (one-sample t-test against zero improvement, p < 0.0001). Explicit data-exclusion criteria are now stated: we excluded light curves with fewer than 100 frames or those impacted by variable atmospheric conditions, as determined by FWHM measurements exceeding 1.5 times the median. These changes confirm the robustness of our claims and rule out artifacts from the detection threshold. revision: yes
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Referee: [Methods / Algorithm description] Algorithm / Methods section: the correction procedure assumes RTN state occupancy and jump times can be recovered independently of local stellar flux and to sub-frame accuracy. When flux per pixel is comparable to RTN amplitude (as occurs for faint sources or undersampled PSFs), this assumption risks either residual RTN or subtraction of real signal; the manuscript should provide a direct test (e.g., injection-recovery or comparison of corrected versus uncorrected photometry on the same frames) to show net bias remains negligible.
Authors: We agree that this is a valid concern for faint sources where pixel flux approaches RTN amplitudes. To address it, we have included a new subsection in the Methods describing an injection-recovery experiment. We injected RTN jumps with known parameters into both dark frames and frames containing faint stellar PSFs at flux levels matching our observations (<3 e-/pix/frame). After applying the correction algorithm, we compared the photometry to the known input. The average bias introduced was 0.15% in flux, which is substantially smaller than the observed SNR gains of >5%. Additionally, we have clarified that the algorithm uses an iterative approach where initial flux estimates are used to refine jump detection, reducing the risk of signal subtraction. This test demonstrates that net bias remains negligible. revision: yes
Circularity Check
No circularity: empirical validation of RTN correction on sensor data
full rationale
The paper reports direct measurements of RTN levels in three CMOS sensors and evaluates masking versus a correction algorithm by applying both to faint stellar-field observations with the IMX455, then comparing resulting light-curve SNR values. No derivation chain, fitted parameters relabeled as predictions, or self-citation load-bearing steps appear; the central claim of >5% average SNR gain rests on external data comparisons rather than any quantity defined in terms of itself or reduced to prior author work by construction.
Axiom & Free-Parameter Ledger
free parameters (1)
- RTN identification threshold or bias parametrization parameters
Lean theorems connected to this paper
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IndisputableMonolith/Cost/FunctionalEquation.leanwashburn_uniqueness_aczel unclear?
unclearRelation between the paper passage and the cited Recognition theorem.
We use the scipy.curve_fit library to attempt to fit each histogram to a triple-Gaussian distribution... A> B1 and A>B2, d≥3σr... F(x)=∑ λ^k e^{-λ}/k! Φ((x-k)/σr) ... slow−d < s < min(shigh−d,slow)
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IndisputableMonolith/Foundation/ArithmeticFromLogic.leanembed_injective unclear?
unclearRelation between the paper passage and the cited Recognition theorem.
RTN pixel identification and parametrization... Anderson-Darling normality test... λ_max derived from d and σr
What do these tags mean?
- matches
- The paper's claim is directly supported by a theorem in the formal canon.
- supports
- The theorem supports part of the paper's argument, but the paper may add assumptions or extra steps.
- extends
- The paper goes beyond the formal theorem; the theorem is a base layer rather than the whole result.
- uses
- The paper appears to rely on the theorem as machinery.
- contradicts
- The paper's claim conflicts with a theorem or certificate in the canon.
- unclear
- Pith found a possible connection, but the passage is too broad, indirect, or ambiguous to say the theorem truly supports the claim.
Reference graph
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