64
Fig. 5. SNR of a CCD-element at a
saturation load of500,000 electrons and
rms-noise of235 electrons.
kpixcl
Fig. 6. Effect of flat field illumination in
the focal plane.
One can clearly see the effect of the shading of the
lens (at the edges the light intensity falls off to about
40%) and of the influence of the PRNU. The
differences of sensitivity of CCDs are usually
indicated in the datasheets as PRNU values in
percent of the values of the videocurrent for the
range far below saturation (mostly at 50% of U mt ).
We will adhere to this definition here as well. Thus
in the linear range of the CCD the fixed pattern
noise of the pixel sensitivity can be expressed
directly as a signal dependent noise, which is
converted into a time dependent noise during
transfer of the charge.
PRNU PRNU
o,.. = //.. = cr;
100%
100%
(3)
Depending on the PRNU of the CCD the signal to
noise ratio results as:
SNR =
(4)
1 +
PRNU
100%
cr.
Figure 7 shows the highest attainable SNR at full
exploitation close to saturation (400,000 to 500,000
signal electrons) in relation to PRNU, based on the
aforementioned parameters. Up to a PRNU value of
0.02% the SNR is determined exclusively by the
photon noise of the signal, the rms noise of the CCD
and the noise of the analogue channel. At 0.1% the
PRNU influence becomes dominant. In the
engineering model of LH Systems’ new airborne
digital sensor, described in sections 6 and 7 below,
the PRNU correction is done pixel-wise.
Fig. 7. SNR in relation to PRNU assuming
a thermal and electronic noise of S e [ = 235
rms-electrons and a signal electron counts
of500 000 e~.
Normally light fall-off of the lens system
(approximately 30%) is corrected simultaneously
with the PRNU correction. For the estimation or the
PRNU correction, this fall-off has not been taken
into account because it does not contribute directly
to an increase of the SNR. It only contributes
indirectly through the adaptation of the signal to the
analogue channel. The correction of light fall-off of
the lens does not restrict the SNR significantly.
The efficiency of the correction can be seen in
Figure 8, which shows imagery of the Reichstag,
Berlin, taken with the engineering model of the LH
Systems airborne digital sensor on 23 April 1999.
The flying height was 3 km and the ground sample
distance is 0.25 m. In the radiometrically zoomed-
out image parts no noise can be seen.