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1\section{Pedestal Extraction \label{sec:pedestals}}
2
3\subsection{Pedestal RMS}
4
5The background $BG$ (Pedestal)
6can be completely described by the noise-autocorrelation matrix $\boldsymbol{B}$
7(eq.~\ref{eq:autocorr}),
8where the diagonal elements give what is usually denoted as the ``Pedestal RMS''.
9\par
10
11By definition, the $\boldsymbol{B}$ and thus the ``pedestal RMS''
12is independent from the signal extractor.
13
14\subsection{Bias and Mean-squared Error}
15
16Consider a large number of same signals $S$. By applying a signal extractor
17we obtain a distribution of estimated signals $\widehat{S}$ (for fixed $S$ and
18fixed background fluctuations $BG$). The distribution of the quantity
19
20\begin{equation}
21X = \widehat{S}-S
22\end{equation}
23
24has the mean $B$ and the Variance $MSE$ defined as:
25
26\begin{eqnarray}
27 B \ \ \ \ = \ \ \ \ \ \ <X> \ \ \ \ \ &=& \ \ <\widehat{S}> \ -\ S\\
28 R \ \ \ \ = \ <(X-B)^2> &=& \ Var[\widehat{S}]\\
29 MSE \ = \ \ \ \ \ <X^2> \ \ \ \ &=& \ Var[\widehat{S}] +\ B^2
30\end{eqnarray}
31
32The parameter $B$ is also called the {\textit{\bf BIAS}} of the estimator and $MSE$
33the {\textit{\bf MEAN-SQUARED ERROR}} which combines the variance of $\widehat{S}$ and
34the bias. Both depend generally on the size of $S$ and the background fluctuations $BG$,
35thus: $B = B(S,BG)$ and $MSE = MSE(S,BG)$.
36
37\par
38Usually, one measures easily the parameter $R$, but needs the $MSE$ for statistical analysis (e.g.
39in the image cleaning).
40However, only in case of a vanishing bias $B$, the two numbers are equal. Otherwise,
41the bias $B$ has to be known beforehand. Note that every sliding window extractor has a
42bias, especially at low or vanishing signals $S$.
43
44\subsection{Pedestal Fluctuations as Contribution to the Signal Fluctuations}
45
46A photo-multiplier signal yields, to a very good approximation, the
47following relation:
48
49\begin{equation}
50\frac{Var[Q]}{<Q>^2} = \frac{1}{<n_{phe}>} * F^2
51\end{equation}
52
53Here, $Q$ is the signal fluctuation due to the number of signal photo-electrons
54(equiv. to the signal $S$), and $Var[Q]$ the fluctuations of the true signal $Q$
55due to the Poisson fluctuations of the number of photo-electrons. Because of:
56
57\begin{eqnarray}
58\widehat{Q} &=& Q + X \\
59Var(\widehat{Q}) &=& Var(Q) + Var(X) \\
60Var(Q) &=& Var(\widehat{Q}) - Var(X)
61\end{eqnarray}
62
63$Var[Q]$ can be obtained from:
64
65\begin{eqnarray}
66Var(Q) &\approx& Var(\widehat{Q}) - Var(\widehat{Q}=0)
67\label{eq:rmssubtraction}
68\end{eqnarray}
69
70In the last line of eq.~\ref{eq:rmssubtraction}, it is assumed that $R$ does not dependent
71on the signal height\footnote{%
72A way to check whether the right RMS has been subtracted is to make the
73``Razmick''-plot
74
75\begin{equation}
76 \frac{Var[\widehat{Q}]}{<\widehat{Q}>^2} \quad \textit{vs.} \quad \frac{1}{<\widehat{Q}>}
77\end{equation}
78
79This should give a straight line passing through the origin. The slope of
80the line is equal to
81
82\begin{equation}
83 c * F^2
84\end{equation}
85
86where $c$ is the photon/ADC conversion factor $<Q>/<m_{pe}>$.}
87(as is the case
88for the digital filter, eq.~\ref{eq:of_noise}). One can then retrieve $R$
89by applying the signal extractor to a {\textit{\bf fixed window}} of pedestal events, where the
90bias vanishes and measure $Var[\widehat{Q}=0]$.
91
92\subsection{Methods to Retrieve Bias and Mean-Squared Error}
93
94In general, the extracted signal variance $R$ is different from the pedestal RMS.
95It cannot be obtained by applying the signal extractor to pedestal events, because of the
96(unknown) bias.
97\par
98In the case of the digital filter, $R$ is expected to be independent from the
99signal amplitude $S$ and depends only on the background $BG$ (eq.~\ref{eq:of_noise}).
100It can then be obtained from the calculation of the variance $Var[\widehat{Q}]$
101by applying the extractor to a fixed window of pure background events (``pedestal events'')
102and get rid of the bias in that way.
103\par
104
105In order to calculate bias and Mean-squared error, we proceeded in the following ways:
106\begin{enumerate}
107\item Determine $R$ by applying the signal extractor to a fixed window
108 of pedestal events. The background fluctuations can be simulated with different
109 levels of night sky background and the continuous light source, but no signal size
110 dependency can be retrieved with this method.
111\item Determine $B$ and $MSE$ from MC events with and without added noise.
112 Assuming that $MSE$ and $B$ are negligible for the events without noise, one can
113 get a dependency of both values from the size of the signal.
114\item Determine $MSE$ from the fitted error of $\widehat{S}$, which is possible for the
115 fit and the digital filter (eq.~\ref{eq:of_noise}).
116 In prinicple, all dependencies can be retrieved with this method.
117\end{enumerate}
118
119
120\begin{figure}[htp]
121\centering
122\includegraphics[width=0.3\linewidth]{MExtractTimeAndChargeSpline_Amplitude_Amplitude_Range_01_09_01_10_Run_38993_RelMean.eps}
123\vspace{\floatsep}
124\includegraphics[width=0.3\linewidth]{MExtractTimeAndChargeSpline_Amplitude_Amplitude_Range_01_09_01_10_Run_38995_RelMean.eps}
125\vspace{\floatsep}
126\includegraphics[width=0.3\linewidth]{MExtractTimeAndChargeSpline_Amplitude_Amplitude_Range_01_09_01_10_Run_38996_RelMean.eps}
127\caption{MExtractTimeAndChargeSpline with amplitude extraction:
128Difference in mean pedestal (per FADC slice) between extraction algorithm
129applied on a fixed window of 1 FADC slice (``extractor random'') and a simple addition of
1302 FADC slices (``fundamental''). On the left, a run with closed camera has been taken, in the center
131 an opened camera observing an extra-galactic star field and on the right, an open camera being
132illuminated by the continuous light of the calibration (level: 100). Every entry corresponds to one
133pixel.}
134\label{fig:amp:relmean}
135\end{figure}
136
137\begin{figure}[htp]
138\centering
139\includegraphics[width=0.3\linewidth]{MExtractTimeAndChargeSpline_Rise-and-Fall-Time_0.5_1.5_Range_01_10_02_12_Run_38993_RelMean.eps}
140\vspace{\floatsep}
141\includegraphics[width=0.3\linewidth]{MExtractTimeAndChargeSpline_Rise-and-Fall-Time_0.5_1.5_Range_01_10_02_12_Run_38995_RelMean.eps}
142\vspace{\floatsep}
143\includegraphics[width=0.3\linewidth]{MExtractTimeAndChargeSpline_Rise-and-Fall-Time_0.5_1.5_Range_01_10_02_12_Run_38996_RelMean.eps}
144\caption{MExtractTimeAndChargeSpline with integral over 2 slices:
145Difference in mean pedestal (per FADC slice) between extraction algorithm
146applied on a fixed window of 2 FADC slices (``extractor random'') and a simple addition of
1472 FADC slices (``fundamental''). On the left, a run with closed camera has been taken, in the center
148 an opened camera observing an extra-galactic star field and on the right, an open camera being
149illuminated by the continuous light of the calibration (level: 100). Every entry corresponds to one
150pixel.}
151\label{fig:int:relmean}
152\end{figure}
153
154\begin{figure}[htp]
155\centering
156\vspace{\floatsep}
157\includegraphics[width=0.3\linewidth]{MExtractTimeAndChargeDigitalFilter_Weights_cosmics_weights.dat_Range_01_14_02_14_Run_38993_RelMean.eps}
158\vspace{\floatsep}
159\includegraphics[width=0.3\linewidth]{MExtractTimeAndChargeDigitalFilter_Weights_cosmics_weights.dat_Range_01_14_02_14_Run_38995_RelMean.eps}
160\vspace{\floatsep}
161\includegraphics[width=0.3\linewidth]{MExtractTimeAndChargeDigitalFilter_Weights_cosmics_weights.dat_Range_01_14_02_14_Run_38996_RelMean.eps}
162\caption{MExtractTimeAndChargeDigitalFilter:
163Difference in mean pedestal (per FADC slice) between extraction algorithm
164applied on a fixed window of 6 FADC slices and time-randomized weights (``extractor random'')
165and a simple addition of
1666 FADC slices (``fundamental''). On the left, a run with closed camera has been taken, in the center
167 an opened camera observing an extra-galactic star field and on the right, an open camera being
168illuminated by the continuous light of the calibration (level: 100). Every entry corresponds to one
169pixel.}
170\label{fig:df:relmean}
171\end{figure}
172
173%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%
174
175\subsubsection{ \label{sec:determiner} Application of the Signal Extractor to a Fixed Window
176of Pedestal Events}
177
178By applying the signal extractor to a fixed window of pedestal events, we
179determine the parameter $R$ for the case of no signal ($Q = 0$). In the case of
180extractors using a fixed window (extractors nr. \#1 to \#22
181in section~\ref{sec:algorithms}), the results are the same by construction
182as calculating the pedestal RMS.
183\par
184In MARS, this functionality is implemented with a function-call to: \\
185
186{\textit{\bf MJPedestal::SetExtractionWithExtractorRndm()}} and/or \\
187{\textit{\bf MExtractPedestal::SetRandomCalculation()}}\\
188
189Besides fixing the global extraction window, additionally the following steps are undertaken
190in order to assure that the bias vanishes:
191
192\begin{description}
193\item[\textit{MExtractTimeAndChargeSpline}:\xspace] The spline
194maximum position -- which determines the exact extraction window -- is placed arbitrarily
195at a random place within the digitizing binning resolution of one central FADC slice.
196\item[\textit{MExtractTimeAndChargeDigitalFilter}:\xspace] The second step timing
197offset $\tau$ (eq.~\ref{eq:offsettau}) gets randomized for each event.
198\end{description}
199
200\par
201
202The following figures~\ref{fig:amp:relmean} through~\ref{fig:df:relrms} show results
203obtained with the second method for three background intensities:
204
205\begin{enumerate}
206\item Closed camera and no (Poissonian) fluctuation due to photons from the night sky background
207\item The camera pointing to an extra-galactic region with stars in the field of view
208\item The camera illuminated by a continuous light source of intensity 100.
209\end{enumerate}
210
211Figures~\ref{fig:amp:relmean} through~\ref{fig:df:relmean}
212show the calculated biases obtained with this method for all pixels in the camera
213and for the different levels of (night-sky) background.
214One can see that the bias vanishes to an accuracy of better than 1\%
215for the extractors which are used in this TDAS.
216
217%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%1
218
219\begin{figure}[htp]
220\centering
221\includegraphics[width=0.47\linewidth]{MExtractTimeAndChargeSpline_Amplitude_Amplitude_Range_01_09_01_10_Run_38993_RMSDiff.eps}
222\vspace{\floatsep}
223\includegraphics[width=0.47\linewidth]{MExtractTimeAndChargeSpline_Amplitude_Amplitude_Range_01_09_01_10_Run_38995_RMSDiff.eps}
224\vspace{\floatsep}
225\includegraphics[width=0.47\linewidth]{MExtractTimeAndChargeSpline_Amplitude_Amplitude_Range_01_09_01_10_Run_38996_RMSDiff.eps}
226\caption{MExtractTimeAndChargeSpline with amplitude:
227Difference in RMS (per FADC slice) between extraction algorithm
228applied on a fixed window and the corresponding pedestal RMS.
229Closed camera (left), open camera observing extra-galactic star field (right) and
230camera being illuminated by the continuous light (bottom).
231Every entry corresponds to one pixel.}
232\label{fig:amp:relrms}
233\end{figure}
234
235
236\begin{figure}[htp]
237\centering
238\includegraphics[width=0.47\linewidth]{MExtractTimeAndChargeSpline_Rise-and-Fall-Time_0.5_1.5_Range_01_10_02_12_Run_38993_RMSDiff.eps}
239\vspace{\floatsep}
240\includegraphics[width=0.47\linewidth]{MExtractTimeAndChargeSpline_Rise-and-Fall-Time_0.5_1.5_Range_01_10_02_12_Run_38995_RMSDiff.eps}
241\vspace{\floatsep}
242\includegraphics[width=0.47\linewidth]{MExtractTimeAndChargeSpline_Rise-and-Fall-Time_0.5_1.5_Range_01_10_02_12_Run_38996_RMSDiff.eps}
243\caption{MExtractTimeAndChargeSpline with integral over 2 slices:
244Difference in RMS (per FADC slice) between extraction algorithm
245applied on a fixed window and the corresponding pedestal RMS.
246Closed camera (left), open camera observing extra-galactic star field (right) and
247camera being illuminated by the continuous light (bottom).
248Every entry corresponds to one
249pixel.}
250\label{fig:amp:relrms}
251\end{figure}
252
253
254\begin{figure}[htp]
255\centering
256\includegraphics[width=0.47\linewidth]{MExtractTimeAndChargeDigitalFilter_Weights_cosmics_weights.dat_Range_01_14_02_14_Run_38993_RMSDiff.eps}
257\vspace{\floatsep}
258\includegraphics[width=0.47\linewidth]{MExtractTimeAndChargeDigitalFilter_Weights_cosmics_weights.dat_Range_01_14_02_14_Run_38995_RMSDiff.eps}
259\vspace{\floatsep}
260\includegraphics[width=0.47\linewidth]{MExtractTimeAndChargeDigitalFilter_Weights_cosmics_weights.dat_Range_01_14_02_14_Run_38996_RMSDiff.eps}
261\caption{MExtractTimeAndChargeDigitalFilter:
262Difference in RMS (per FADC slice) between extraction algorithm
263applied on a fixed window and the corresponding pedestal RMS.
264Closed camera (left), open camera observing extra-galactic star field (right) and
265camera being illuminated by the continuous light (bottom).
266Every entry corresponds to one pixel.}
267\label{fig:df:relrms}
268\end{figure}
269
270
271
272%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%
273
274Figures~\ref{fig:amp:relrms} through~\ref{fig:amp:relrms} show the
275differences in $R$ between the calculated pedestal RMS and
276the one obtained by applying the extractor, converted to equivalent photo-electrons. One entry
277corresponds to one pixel of the camera.
278The distributions have a negative mean in the case of the digital filter showing the
279``filter'' capacity of that algorithm. It ``filters out'' between 0.12 photo-electrons night sky
280background for the extra-galactic star-field until 0.2 photo-electrons for the continuous light.
281
282%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%
283
284
285\subsubsection{ \label{sec:determiner} Application of the Signal Extractor to a Sliding Window
286of Pedestal Events}
287
288By applying the signal extractor to a global extraction window of pedestal events, allowing
289it to ``slide'' and maximize the encountered signal, we
290determine the bias $B$ and the mean-squared error $MSE$ for the case of no signal ($S=0$).
291\par
292In MARS, this functionality is implemented with a function-call to: \\
293
294{\textit{\bf MJPedestal::SetExtractionWithExtractor()}} \\
295
296\par
297Table~\ref{tab:bias} shows bias, resolution and mean-square error for all extractors employing
298a sliding window.
299
300\begin{table}[htp]
301\centering
302\scriptsize{
303\begin{tabular}{|c|c|c|c|c|c|c|c|c|c|c|c|c|c|}
304\hline
305\hline
306\multicolumn{14}{|c|}{Statistical Parameters for $S=0$} \\
307\hline
308\hline
309 & & \multicolumn{4}{|c|}{Closed camera} & \multicolumn{4}{|c|}{Extra-galactic NSB} & \multicolumn{4}{|c|}{Galactic NSB} \\
310\hline
311\hline
312Nr. & Name & $R$ & $B$ & $R$ & $\sqrt{MSE}$ & $R$ &$B$ & $R$ & $\sqrt{MSE}$& $R$ & $B$& $R$ & $\sqrt{MSE}$ \\
313 & & (FW)& (SW)& (SW)& (SW) & (FW)& (SW)&(SW) & (SW) & (FW)&(SW) & (SW)&(SW) \\
314\hline
31517 & Slid. Win. 2 & 0.5 & 0.4 & 0.5 & 0.6 & 1.4 & 1.2 & 1.4 & 1.8 & 1.6 & 1.5 & 1.6 & 2.2 \\
31618 & Slid. Win. 4 & 0.8 & 0.5 & 0.8 & 0.9 & 1.9 & 1.2 & 1.9 & 2.2 & 2.2 & 1.6 & 2.3 & 2.8 \\
31720 & Slid. Win. 6 & 1.0 & 0.4 & 1.0 & 1.1 & 2.2 & 1.1 & 2.2 & 2.5 & 2.6 & 1.4 & 2.7 & 3.0 \\
31821 & Slid. Win. 8 & 1.2 & 0.4 & 1.3 & 1.4 & 2.5 & 1.0 & 2.5 & 2.7 & 3.0 & 1.4 & 3.2 & 3.5 \\
319\hline
32023 & Spline Amp. & 0.4 & 0.4 & 0.4 & 0.6 & 1.1 & 1.3 & 1.2 & 1.8 & 1.3 & 1.6 & 1.4 & 2.1 \\
32124 & Spline Int. 1 & 0.4 & 0.3 & 0.4 & 0.5 & 1.0 & 1.0 & 1.1 & 1.5 & 1.3 & 1.3 & 1.3 & 1.8 \\
32225 & Spline Int. 2 & 0.5 & 0.3 & 0.5 & 0.6 & 1.3 & 0.9 & 1.4 & 1.7 & 1.7 & 1.2 & 1.6 & 2.0 \\
32326 & Spline Int. 4 & 0.7 & 0.2 & 0.7 & 0.7 & 1.5 & 0.8 & 1.7 & 1.9 & 2.0 & 1.0 & 2.0 & 2.2 \\
32427 & Spline Int. 6 & 1.0 & 0.3 & 1.0 & 1.0 & 2.0 & 0.8 & 2.0 & 2.2 & 2.6 & 0.9 & 2.5 & 2.7 \\
325\hline
32628 & Dig. Filt. 6 & 0.4 & 0.4 & 0.5 & 0.6 & 1.1 & 1.3 & 1.3 & 1.8 & 1.3 & 1.5 & 1.5 & 2.1 \\
32729 & Dig. Filt. 4 & 0.3 & 0.3 & 0.4 & 0.5 & 0.9 & 1.0 & 1.1 & 1.5 & 1.1 & 1.2 & 1.4 & 1.8 \\
328\hline
329\hline
330\end{tabular}
331}
332\caption{The statistical parameters bias, resolution and mean error. All units in equiv.
333photo-electrons, uncertainty: 0.1 phes. All extractors were allowed to move 5 FADC slices plus
334their window size.}
335\label{tab:bias}
336\end{table}
337
338
339
340
341\par
342Figures~\ref{fig:amp:distped} through~\ref{fig:df:distped} show the
343extracted pedestal distributions for the digital filter with cosmics weights (extractor~\#28) and the
344spline amplitude (extractor~\#27), respectively for one examplary channel (corresponding to pixel 200).
345One can see the (asymmetric) Poisson behaviour of the
346night sky background photons for the distributions with open camera and the cutoff at the lower egde
347for the distribution with high-intensity continuous light due to a limited pedestal offset and the cutoff
348to negative fluctuations.
349\par
350
351\begin{figure}[htp]
352\centering
353\includegraphics[height=0.43\textheight]{PedestalSpectrum-18-Run38993.eps}
354\vspace{\floatsep}
355\includegraphics[height=0.43\textheight]{PedestalSpectrum-18-Run38995.eps}
356\caption{MExtractTimeAndChargeSlidingWindow with extraction window of 4 FADC slices:
357Distribution of extracted "pedestals" from pedestal run with
358closed camera (top) and open camera observing an extra-galactic star field (bottom) for one channel
359(pixel 100). The result obtained from a simple addition of 4 FADC
360slice contents (``fundamental'') is displayed as red histogram, the one obtained from the application of
361the algorithm on
362a fixed window of 4 FADC slices as blue histogram (``extractor random'') and the one obtained from the
363full algorithm allowed to slide within a global window of 12 slices. The obtained histogram means and
364RMSs have been converted to equiv. photo-electrons.}
365\label{fig:sw:distped}
366\end{figure}
367
368
369\begin{figure}[htp]
370\centering
371\includegraphics[height=0.43\textheight]{PedestalSpectrum-23-Run38993.eps}
372\vspace{\floatsep}
373\includegraphics[height=0.43\textheight]{PedestalSpectrum-23-Run38995.eps}
374\caption{MExtractTimeAndChargeSpline with amplitude extraction:
375Spectrum of extracted "pedestals" from pedestal run with
376closed camera lids (top) and open lids observing an extra-galactic star field (bottom) for one channel
377(pixel 100). The result obtained from a simple addition of 2 FADC
378slice contents (``fundamental'') is displayed as red histogram, the one obtained from the application
379of the algorithm on a fixed window of 1 FADC slice as blue histogram (``extractor random'')
380and the one obtained from the
381full algorithm allowed to slide within a global window of 12 slices. The obtained histogram means and
382RMSs have been converted to equiv. photo-electrons.}
383\label{fig:amp:distped}
384\end{figure}
385
386\begin{figure}[htp]
387\centering
388\includegraphics[height=0.43\textheight]{PedestalSpectrum-25-Run38993.eps}
389\vspace{\floatsep}
390\includegraphics[height=0.43\textheight]{PedestalSpectrum-25-Run38995.eps}
391\caption{MExtractTimeAndChargeSpline with integral extraction over 2 FADC slices:
392Distribution of extracted "pedestals" from pedestal run with
393closed camera lids (top) and open lids observing an extra-galactic star field (bottom) for one channel
394(pixel 100). The result obtained from a simple addition of 2 FADC
395slice contents (``fundamental'') is displayed as red histogram, the one obtained from the application
396of time-randomized weigths on a fixed window of 2 FADC slices as blue histogram and the one obtained from the
397full algorithm allowed to slide within a global window of 12 slices. The obtained histogram means and
398RMSs have been converted to equiv. photo-electrons.}
399\label{fig:int:distped}
400\end{figure}
401
402\begin{figure}[htp]
403\centering
404\includegraphics[height=0.43\textheight]{PedestalSpectrum-28-Run38993.eps}
405\vspace{\floatsep}
406\includegraphics[height=0.43\textheight]{PedestalSpectrum-28-Run38995.eps}
407\caption{MExtractTimeAndChargeDigitalFilter: Spectrum of extracted "pedestals" from pedestal run with
408closed camera lids (top) and open lids observing an extra-galactic star field (bottom) for one channel
409(pixel 100). The result obtained from a simple addition of 6 FADC
410slice contents (``fundamental'') is displayed as red histogram, the one obtained from the application
411of time-randomized weigths on a fixed window of 6 slices as blue histogram and the one obtained from the
412full algorithm allowed to slide within a global window of 12 slices. The obtained histogram means and
413RMSs have been converted to equiv. photo-electrons.}
414\label{fig:df:distped}
415\end{figure}
416
417\par
418
419Because the background is determined by the single photo-electrons from the night-sky background,
420the following possibilities can occur:
421
422\begin{enumerate}
423\item There is no ``signal'' (photo-electron) in the extraction window and the extractor
424finds only electronic noise.
425Usually, the returned signal charge is then negative.
426\item The extractor finds the signal from one photo-electron
427\item The extractor finds an overlap of two or more photo-electrons.
428\end{enumerate}
429
430Although the probability to find a certain number of photo-electrons in a fixed window follows a
431Poisson distribution, the one for employing the sliding window is {\textit{not}} Poissonian. The extractor
432will usually find one photo-electron even if more are present in the global search window, i.e. the
433probability for two or more photo-electrons to occur in the global search window is much higher than
434the probability for these photo-electrons to overlap in time such as to be recognized as a double
435or triple photo-electron pulse by the extractor. This is especially true for small extraction windows
436and for the digital filter.
437
438\par
439
440Given a global extraction window of size $WS$ and an average rate of photo-electrons from the night-sky
441background $R$, we will now calculate the probability for the extractor to find zero photo-electrons in the
442$WS$. The probability to find $k$ photo-electrons can be written as:
443
444\begin{equation}
445P(k) = \frac{e^{-R\cdot WS} (R \cdot WS)^k}{k!}
446\end{equation}
447
448and thus:
449
450\begin{equation}
451P(0) = e^{-R\cdot WS}
452\end{equation}
453
454The probability to find more than one photo-electron is then:
455
456\begin{equation}
457P(>0) = 1 - e^{-R\cdot WS}
458\end{equation}
459
460Figures~\ref{fig:sphe:sphespectrum} show spectra
461obtained with the digital filter applied on two different global search windows.
462One can clearly distinguish a pedestal peak (fitted to Gaussian with index 0),
463corresponding to the case of  $P(0)$ and further
464contributions of $P(1)$ and $P(2)$ (fitted to Gaussians with index 1 and 2).
465One can also see that the contribution of $P(0)$ dimishes
466with increasing global search window size.
467
468\begin{figure}
469\centering
470\includegraphics[height=0.3\textheight]{SinglePheSpectrum-28-Run38995-WS2.5.eps}
471\vspace{\floatsep}
472\includegraphics[height=0.3\textheight]{SinglePheSpectrum-28-Run38995-WS4.5.eps}
473\vspace{\floatsep}
474\includegraphics[height=0.3\textheight]{SinglePheSpectrum-28-Run38995-WS8.5.eps}
475\caption{MExtractTimeAndChargeDigitalFilter: Spectrum obtained from the extraction
476of a pedestal run using a sliding window of 6 FADC slices allowed to move within a window of
4777 (top), 9 (center) and 13 slices.
478A pedestal run with galactic star background has been taken and one exemplary pixel (Nr. 100).
479One can clearly see the pedestal contribution and a further part corresponding to one or more
480photo-electrons.}
481\label{fig:df:sphespectrum}
482\end{figure}
483
484In the following, we will make a short consistency test: Assuming that the spectral peaks are
485attributed correctly, one would expect the following relation:
486
487\begin{equation}
488P(0) / P(>0) = \frac{e^{-R\cdot WS}}{1-e^{-R\cdot WS}}
489\end{equation}
490
491We tested this relation assuming that the fitted area underneath the pedestal peak $Area_0$ is
492proportional to $P(0)$ and the sum of the fitted areas underneath the single photo-electron peak
493$Area_1$ and the double photo-electron peak $Area_2$ proportional to $P(>0)$. Thus, one expects:
494
495\begin{equation}
496Area_0 / (Area_1 + Area+2 ) = \frac{e^{-R\cdot WS}}{1-e^{-R\cdot WS}}
497\end{equation}
498
499We estimated the effective window size $WS$ as the sum of the range in which the digital filter
500amplitude weights are greater than 0.5 (1.6 FADC slices) and the global search window minus the
501size of the window size of the weights (which is 6 FADC slices). Figures~\ref{fig::df:ratiofit}
502show the result for two different levels of night-sky background.
503
504\par
505
506\begin{figure}[htp]
507\centering
508\includegraphics[height=0.4\textheight]{SinglePheRatio-28-Run38995.eps}
509\vspace{\floatsep}
510\includegraphics[height=0.4\textheight]{SinglePheRatio-28-Run39258.eps}
511\caption{MExtractTimeAndChargeDigitalFilter: Fit to the ratio of the area beneath the pedestal peak and
512the single and double photo-electron(s) peak(s) with the extraction algorithm
513applied on a sliding window of different sizes.
514In the top plot, a pedestal run with extra-galactic star background has been taken and in the bottom,
515a galatic star background. An exemplary pixel (Nr. 100) has been used.
516Above, a rate of 0.8 phe/ns and below, a rate of 1.0 phe/ns has been obtained.}
517\label{fig:df:ratiofit}
518\end{figure}
519
520
521
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