If the HRMA Point Spread Function (PSF) were infinitely narrow, then
a simplified treatment of pileup would consist of the following simple
algorithm. The spectrum of a mono-energetic incident flux would appear
in the CCD as a series of peaks, each separated by the energy of the individual
photons. The number of events found at the incident energy, EL,
would be the number of frames containing a single photon. The number of
events seen at the apparent energy of
would be the number of frames with two piled-up photons. The number of
events at 3 X EL is the number of frames with three piled-up
photons, and so on. Thus to extract the true number of incident photons
one could integrate over each peak in the observed CCD spectrum and sum
them, after weighting by how many photons occur in each peak. Expressed
as an equation:
![]() |
(6.11) |
where
![]() |
(6.12) |
I(E) is the observed CCD spectrum and
is the energy halfwidth of the line.
Unfortunately this simple algorithm is insufficient for complete correction.
Fig. 6.31 shows the result
of fitting Gaussian profiles to each peak in the countrate linearity measurements
at 1.486 keV (Al-K
).
The circles are the number of counts per second in the single photon peak
alone, while the diamonds are the inferred rate based on equation 6.11.
Only events falling into the ASCA grades 02346 were included.
Figure 6.31: Plot of
CCD detected flux vs. BND count rate; circles are CCD flux in
single photon peak alone - diamonds are CCD flux corrected for higher
order
pileup peaks.

If the same algorithm is applied, but instead calculating the number
of events by integrating the total number of counts with a region of interest
(ROI) starting at the top of the lower order pileup peak, going up to the
top edge of the given pileup peak, then the pileup correction for the same
data looks like Fig. 6.32. The
pileup correction is clearly still not correcting for all events (otherwise
the diamonds would fall on a straight line, indicating direct proportionality
between the CCD inferred rate and the BND rate), but using an ROI detects
significantly more events than Gaussian fits to the peaks. The implication
is that the interaction between multiple charge clouds produce event spatial
distributions which cause a loss of charge (to the event reconstruction
algorithm). This is not implausible if we consider that the HRMA PSF is
not perfect, but causes photons to be distributed with a
0.5
arc second FWHM over the CCD (roughly a pixel). Thus succeeding photons
do not always strike the same pixel, but frequently strike neighboring
pixels. When this occurs further charge splitting results in some charge
outside the 3x3 event reconstruction neighborhood, and thus causing loss
of charge. For the succeeding plots we use the ROI method when reconstructing
events.
Figure 6.32: Plot of CCD detected
flux vs. BND count rate using ROI; circles are CCD flux in single photon
peak alone - diamonds are CCD flux corrected for higher order pileup peaks.

In the Count-Rate Linearity tests the number of photons per frame was
regulated in two ways: the X-ray beam intensity was increased at a single
frame time (0.11 second); and the X-ray beam intensity was held constant
while the CCD frame times were increased (0.11, 0.22, 0.33, 0.66 second).
In principle the relevant quantity describing the pileup behavior should
be the number of photons per frame (which is the product of the frame time
times the rate of photons per frame). To check this we plot the `Pile Up
Fraction' versus counts per frame with constant frame time (filled circles)
and with constant incident X-ray flux (stars; Fig. 6.33).
Figure 6.33: Plot of
Pile Up Fraction vs. number of counts per frame; Circles: CCD frame
time is held constant at 0.11 seconds, while beam intensity is varied;
Stars: CCD frame time varies, while beam intensity is constant.

The `Pile Up Fraction' is defined as the ratio of the number of events inferred in the n=2 and higher peaks divided by the total number of events, including the n=1 peak. The two sets of points are in good agreement, leading us to conclude that the pileup effect can be treated as a function of the total counts per frame (within the PSF), independent of the frametime.
If, instead of using the standard grade selection (g02346), we accept
all events regardless of grade, then the pileup correction of equation
6.11
becomes much better. Figure 6.34
shows the correlation of the total ACIS rate (all grades) after pileup
correction versus the incident beam (as determined by the BND counting
rate). Note that the circles form a nearly straight line, indicating that
the pileup corrected CCD rate is proportional to the BND rate, and hence
the incident flux. Even if some X-rays are not being counted, the linearity
and proportionality shows that we will be able to calibrate a conversion
factor to correct piled-up photons into incident X-ray flux.
Figure 6.34: Plot of
pileup corrected CCD flux with all grades (with and without
ACIS grade 255) - Open symbols: all grades, including ACIS 255; Filled
symbols: all grades, excluding ACIS 255

Unfortunately the total rate expected from background events in orbit will saturate the telemetry if no grade selection is applied. A significant reduction in charged particle events can be achieved by merely excluding the ACIS grade 255 events (i.e. all eight neighbors of the central pixel exceed the split event threshold). The proportionality of the CCD corrected rate to the BND rate remains, indicating that exclusion of grade 255 still allows flux pile-up correction.
The success of the pileup correction in this monochromatic case does not mean that the pileup problem is solved in general. In astrophysical spectra the usual case is a distribution of many photon energies. When multiple photons are combined we lose the ability to individually recognize them. Moreover as the incident energy changes so to does the event spreading, which means that the monochromatic case will need to be explored at differing energies.
The next section describes analysis of the measurements made at the XRCF which were intended to test the effects of pileup.