Measurement of low light flux by photon counting
- 1 November 1968
- journal article
- Published by IOP Publishing in Journal of Physics D: Applied Physics
- Vol. 1 (11) , 1459-1468
- https://doi.org/10.1088/0022-3727/1/11/310
Abstract
In order to measure low light flux with a photomultiplier tube it is necessary to know the properties of the dark current of the tube. In this paper the dark-current statistics and other properties are measured for an International Telephone and Telegraph FW 130 photomultiplier both cooled and at room temperature. The tube was found to have a constant non-thermal residual count rate. The pulse height distribution of these non-thermal dark-count pulses was shown to be the same as for the room-temperature dark current and to correspond to electrons emitted from the cathode. The dark-count pulses were shown to have a Poisson counting distribution both at room temperature and when the tube was cooled. Finally, having demonstrated that the cooled dark current was random, a low light flux giving 0043 photoelectrons/s was detected in the presence of a cooled dark current (at maximum efficiency) of 0459 counts/s.Keywords
This publication has 7 references indexed in Scilit:
- The Measurement and Analysis of Photon Counting DistributionsOptica Acta: International Journal of Optics, 1967
- Measurement of Low Light Intensities by Synchronous Single Photon CountingReview of Scientific Instruments, 1966
- Some Statistical Properties of Pulses from PhotomultipliersApplied Optics, 1965
- An investigation of noise in Venetian blind photomultipliersJournal of Scientific Instruments, 1964
- A Note on Poisson Branching Processes with Reference to Photon–Electron ConvertersApplied Optics, 1964
- Tests of Photomultipliers for Astronomical Pulse-Counting ApplicationsApplied Optics, 1963
- A statistical theory of cascade multiplicationMathematical Proceedings of the Cambridge Philosophical Society, 1948