| 1 | \section{Pedestal Extraction \label{sec:pedestals}} | 
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| 2 |  | 
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| 3 | \subsection{Pedestal RMS} | 
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| 4 |  | 
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| 5 | The background $BG$ (Pedestal) | 
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| 6 | can be completely described by the noise-autocorrelation matrix $\boldsymbol{B}$ | 
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| 7 | (eq.~\ref{eq:autocorr}), | 
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| 8 | where the square root of the diagonal elements give what is usually denoted as the ``pedestal RMS''. | 
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| 9 | \par | 
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| 10 |  | 
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| 11 | By definition, $\boldsymbol{B}$ and thus the ``pedestal RMS'' | 
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| 12 | is independent of the signal extractor. | 
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| 13 |  | 
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| 14 | \subsection{Pedestal Fluctuations as Contribution to the Signal Fluctuations \label{sec:ffactor}} | 
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| 15 |  | 
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| 16 | A photo-multiplier signal yields, to a very good approximation, the | 
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| 17 | following relation: | 
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| 18 |  | 
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| 19 | \begin{equation} | 
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| 20 | \frac{Var[Q]}{<Q>^2} = \frac{1}{<n_{\mathrm{phe}}>} * F^2 | 
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| 21 | \end{equation} | 
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| 22 |  | 
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| 23 | Here, $Q$ is the signal due to a number $n_{\mathrm{phe}}$ of signal photo-electrons | 
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| 24 | (equiv. to the signal $S$) after subtraction of the pedestal. $Var[Q]$ is the fluctuation of the true signal $Q$ | 
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| 25 | due to the Poisson fluctuations of the number of photo-electrons. Because of: | 
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| 26 |  | 
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| 27 | \begin{eqnarray} | 
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| 28 | \widehat{Q} &=& Q + X \\ | 
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| 29 | Var[\widehat{Q}] &=& Var[Q] + Var[X] \\ | 
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| 30 | Var[Q]           &=& Var[\widehat{Q}] - Var[X] | 
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| 31 | \end{eqnarray} | 
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| 32 |  | 
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| 33 | Here, $Var[X]$ is the fluctuation due to the signal extraction, mainly as a result of the background fluctuations and | 
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| 34 | the numerical precision of the extraction algorithm. | 
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| 35 | \par | 
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| 36 | Only in the case that the intrinsic extractor resolution $R$ at fixed background $BG$ does not depend on the signal | 
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| 37 | intensity\footnote{Theoretically, this is the case for the digital filter, eq.~\ref{eq:of_noise}.}, | 
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| 38 | $Var[Q]$ can be obtained from: | 
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| 39 |  | 
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| 40 | \begin{eqnarray} | 
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| 41 | Var[Q] &\approx& Var[\widehat{Q}] - Var[\widehat{Q}]\,\vline_{\,Q=0} | 
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| 42 | \label{eq:rmssubtraction} | 
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| 43 | \end{eqnarray} | 
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| 44 |  | 
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| 45 | %\footnote{% | 
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| 46 | %A way to check whether the right RMS has been subtracted is to make the | 
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| 47 | %``Razmick''-plot | 
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| 48 | % | 
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| 49 | %\begin{equation} | 
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| 50 | %    \frac{Var[\widehat{Q}]}{<\widehat{Q}>^2} \quad \textit{vs.} \quad \frac{1}{<\widehat{Q}>} | 
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| 51 | %\end{equation} | 
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| 52 | % | 
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| 53 | %This should give a straight line passing through the origin. The slope of | 
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| 54 | %the line is equal to | 
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| 55 | % | 
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| 56 | %\begin{equation} | 
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| 57 | %    c * F^2 | 
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| 58 | %\end{equation} | 
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| 59 | % | 
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| 60 | %where $c$ is the photon/ADC conversion factor  $<Q>/<m_{pe}>$.} | 
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| 61 |  | 
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| 62 | One can determine $R$ by applying the signal extractor with a {\textit{\bf fixed window}} to pedestal events, where the | 
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| 63 | bias vanishes and measure $Var(\widehat{Q})\,\vline_{\,Q=0}$. | 
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| 64 |  | 
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| 65 | \subsection{Methods to Retrieve Bias and Mean-Squared Error} | 
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| 66 |  | 
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| 67 | In general, the extracted signal variance $R$ is different from the pedestal RMS. | 
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| 68 | It can be obtained by applying the signal extractor to pedestal events yielding the bias and | 
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| 69 | the resolution $R$. | 
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| 70 | \par | 
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| 71 | In the case of the digital filter, $R$ is expected to be independent of the | 
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| 72 | signal amplitude $S$ and dependent only on the background $BG$ (eq.~\ref{eq:of_noise}). | 
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| 73 | %It can then be obtained from the calculation of the variance $Var[\widehat{Q}]$ | 
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| 74 | %by applying the extractor with a fixed window to pure background events (``pedestal events''). | 
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| 75 | \par | 
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| 76 |  | 
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| 77 | In order to calculate the statistical parameters, we proceed in the following ways: | 
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| 78 | \begin{enumerate} | 
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| 79 | \item Determine $R$ by applying the signal extractor to a fixed window | 
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| 80 | of pedestal events. The background fluctuations can be simulated with different | 
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| 81 | levels of night sky background and the continuous light source, but no signal size | 
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| 82 | dependence can be retrieved by this method. | 
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| 83 | \item Determine $B$ and $MSE$ from MC events with added noise. | 
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| 84 | %    Assuming that $MSE$ and $B$ are negligible for the events without noise, one can | 
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| 85 | With this method, one can get a dependence of both values on the size of the signal, | 
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| 86 | although the MC might contain systematic differences with respect to the real data. | 
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| 87 | \item Determine $MSE$ from the error retrieved from the fit results of $\widehat{S}$, which is possible for the | 
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| 88 | fit and the digital filter (eq.~\ref{eq:of_noise}). | 
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| 89 | In principle, all dependencies can be retrieved with this method, although some systematic errors are not taken into account | 
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| 90 | with this method: Deviations of the real pulse from the fitted one, errors in the noise auto-correlation matrix and numerical | 
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| 91 | precision issues. All these systematic effects add an additional contribution to the true resolution proportional to the signal strength. | 
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| 92 | \end{enumerate} | 
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| 93 |  | 
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| 94 |  | 
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| 95 | %\begin{figure}[htp] | 
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| 96 | %\centering | 
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| 97 | %\includegraphics[width=0.3\linewidth]{MExtractTimeAndChargeSpline_Amplitude_Amplitude_Range_01_09_01_10_Run_38993_RelMean.eps} | 
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| 98 | %\vspace{\floatsep} | 
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| 99 | %\includegraphics[width=0.3\linewidth]{MExtractTimeAndChargeSpline_Amplitude_Amplitude_Range_01_09_01_10_Run_38995_RelMean.eps} | 
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| 100 | %\vspace{\floatsep} | 
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| 101 | %\includegraphics[width=0.3\linewidth]{MExtractTimeAndChargeSpline_Amplitude_Amplitude_Range_01_09_01_10_Run_38996_RelMean.eps} | 
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| 102 | %\caption{MExtractTimeAndChargeSpline with amplitude extraction: | 
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| 103 | %Difference in mean pedestal (per FADC slice) between extraction algorithm | 
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| 104 | %applied on a fixed window of 1 FADC slice (``extractor random'') and a simple addition of | 
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| 105 | %2 fixed FADC slices (``fundamental''). On the left, a run with closed camera has been taken, in the center | 
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| 106 | % an opened camera observing an extra-galactic star field and on the right, an open camera being | 
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| 107 | %illuminated by the continuous light of the calibration (level: 100). Every entry corresponds to one | 
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| 108 | %pixel.} | 
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| 109 | %\label{fig:amp:relmean} | 
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| 110 | %\end{figure} | 
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| 111 |  | 
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| 112 | %\begin{figure}[htp] | 
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| 113 | %\centering | 
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| 114 | %\includegraphics[width=0.3\linewidth]{MExtractTimeAndChargeSpline_Rise-and-Fall-Time_0.5_1.5_Range_01_10_02_12_Run_38993_RelMean.eps} | 
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| 115 | %\vspace{\floatsep} | 
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| 116 | %\includegraphics[width=0.3\linewidth]{MExtractTimeAndChargeSpline_Rise-and-Fall-Time_0.5_1.5_Range_01_10_02_12_Run_38995_RelMean.eps} | 
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| 117 | %\vspace{\floatsep} | 
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| 118 | %\includegraphics[width=0.3\linewidth]{MExtractTimeAndChargeSpline_Rise-and-Fall-Time_0.5_1.5_Range_01_10_02_12_Run_38996_RelMean.eps} | 
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| 119 | %\caption{MExtractTimeAndChargeSpline with integral over 2 slices: | 
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| 120 | %Difference in mean pedestal (per FADC slice) between extraction algorithm | 
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| 121 | %applied on a fixed window of 2 FADC slices (``extractor random'') and a simple addition of | 
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| 122 | %2 FADC fixed slices (``fundamental''). On the left, a run with closed camera has been taken, in the center | 
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| 123 | % an opened camera observing an extra-galactic star field and on the right, an open camera being | 
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| 124 | %illuminated by the continuous light of the calibration (level: 100). Every entry corresponds to one | 
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| 125 | %pixel.} | 
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| 126 | %\label{fig:int:relmean} | 
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| 127 | %\end{figure} | 
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| 128 |  | 
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| 129 | %\begin{figure}[htp] | 
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| 130 | %\centering | 
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| 131 | %\vspace{\floatsep} | 
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| 132 | %\includegraphics[width=0.3\linewidth]{MExtractTimeAndChargeDigitalFilter_Weights_cosmics_weights.dat_Range_01_14_02_14_Run_38993_RelMean.eps} | 
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| 133 | %\vspace{\floatsep} | 
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| 134 | %\includegraphics[width=0.3\linewidth]{MExtractTimeAndChargeDigitalFilter_Weights_cosmics_weights.dat_Range_01_14_02_14_Run_38995_RelMean.eps} | 
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| 135 | %\vspace{\floatsep} | 
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| 136 | %\includegraphics[width=0.3\linewidth]{MExtractTimeAndChargeDigitalFilter_Weights_cosmics_weights.dat_Range_01_14_02_14_Run_38996_RelMean.eps} | 
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| 137 | %\caption{MExtractTimeAndChargeDigitalFilter: | 
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| 138 | %Difference in mean pedestal (per FADC slice) between extraction algorithm | 
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| 139 | %applied on a fixed window of 6 FADC slices and time-randomized weights (``extractor random'') | 
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| 140 | %and a simple addition of | 
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| 141 | %6 FADC fixed slices (``fundamental''). On the left, a run with closed camera has been taken, in the center | 
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| 142 | % an opened camera observing an extra-galactic star field and on the right, an open camera being | 
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| 143 | %illuminated by the continuous light of the calibration (level: 100). Every entry corresponds to one | 
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| 144 | %pixel.} | 
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| 145 | %\label{fig:df:relmean} | 
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| 146 | %\end{figure} | 
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| 147 |  | 
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| 148 | %%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%% | 
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| 149 |  | 
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| 150 | \subsubsection{ \label{sec:ped:fixedwindow} Application of the Signal Extractor to a Fixed Window | 
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| 151 | of Pedestal Events} | 
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| 152 |  | 
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| 153 | By applying the signal extractor with a fixed window to pedestal events, we | 
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| 154 | determine the parameter $R$ for the case of no signal ($Q = 0$)\footnote{% | 
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| 155 | In the case of | 
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| 156 | extractors using a fixed window (extractors nr. \#1 to \#22 | 
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| 157 | in section~\ref{sec:algorithms}), the results are the same by construction | 
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| 158 | as calculating the RMS of the sum of a fixed number of FADC slice, traditionally | 
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| 159 | named ``pedestal RMS'' in MARS.}. | 
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| 160 | \par | 
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| 161 | In MARS, this functionality is implemented with a function-call to: \\ | 
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| 162 |  | 
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| 163 | {\textit{\bf MJPedestal::SetExtractionWithExtractorRndm()}} including \\ | 
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| 164 | {\textit{\bf MExtractPedestal::SetRandomCalculation()}}\\ | 
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| 165 |  | 
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| 166 | Besides fixing the global extraction window, additionally the following steps are undertaken | 
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| 167 | in order to assure an un-biased resolution. | 
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| 168 |  | 
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| 169 | \begin{description} | 
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| 170 | \item[\textit{MExtractTimeAndChargeSpline}:\xspace] The spline | 
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| 171 | maximum position -- which determines the exact extraction window -- is placed | 
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| 172 | at a random place within the digitizing binning resolution of one central FADC slice. | 
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| 173 | \item[\textit{MExtractTimeAndChargeDigitalFilter}:\xspace] The second step timing | 
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| 174 | offset $\tau$ (eq.~\ref{eq:offsettau}) is chosen randomly for each event. | 
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| 175 | \end{description} | 
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| 176 |  | 
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| 177 | \par | 
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| 178 |  | 
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| 179 | %The following figures~\ref{fig:amp:relmean} through~\ref{fig:df:relrms} show results | 
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| 180 | %obtained with the second method for three background intensities: | 
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| 181 |  | 
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| 182 | %\begin{enumerate} | 
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| 183 | %\item Closed camera and no (Poissonian) fluctuation due to photons from the night sky background | 
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| 184 | %\item The camera pointing to an extra-galactic region with stars in the field of view | 
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| 185 | %\item The camera illuminated by a continuous light source of intensity 100. | 
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| 186 | %\end{enumerate} | 
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| 187 |  | 
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| 188 | The calculated biases obtained with this method for all pixels in the camera | 
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| 189 | and for the different levels of (night-sky) background applied vanish | 
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| 190 | to an accuracy of better than 2\% of a photo-electron | 
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| 191 | for the extractors which are used in this TDAS. | 
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| 192 | \par | 
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| 193 | Table~\ref{tab::ped:fw} shows the resolutions $R$ obtained | 
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| 194 | by applying an extractor to a fixed extraction window, | 
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| 195 | for the inner and outer pixels, respectively, for four different camera illumination conditions: | 
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| 196 | Closed camera (run \#38993), star-field of an extra-galactic source observation (run~\#38995), | 
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| 197 | star-field of the Crab-Nebula observation (run~\#39258) and observation with the almost fully | 
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| 198 | illuminated moon at an angular distance of about~60$^\circ$ from the telescope pointing position | 
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| 199 | (run~\#46471). In the first three cases, the RMS of the values has been calculated while in the | 
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| 200 | fourth case, the high-end side of the signal distributions have been fitted to a Gaussian. | 
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| 201 | \par | 
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| 202 | The entries belonging to the rows denoted as ``Slid. Win.'' are by construction identical to those | 
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| 203 | obtained by simply summing up the FADC slices (the ``fundamental Pedestal RMS''). | 
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| 204 | Note that the digital filter yields much smaller values of $R$ than the ``sliding windows'' of | 
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| 205 | a same window size. This characteristic shows the | 
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| 206 | ``filter''--capacity of that algorithm. It ``filters out'' up to 50\% of the night sky | 
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| 207 | background photo-electrons. | 
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| 208 | \par | 
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| 209 | One can see that the ratio between the pedestal RMS of outer and inner pixels is around a factor~3 | 
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| 210 | for the closed camera and then 1.6--1.9 for the other conditions. | 
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| 211 |  | 
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| 212 | %%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%% | 
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| 213 |  | 
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| 214 |  | 
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| 215 | %%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%1 | 
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| 216 |  | 
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| 217 | %\begin{figure}[htp] | 
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| 218 | %\centering | 
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| 219 | %\includegraphics[width=0.47\linewidth]{MExtractTimeAndChargeSpline_Amplitude_Amplitude_Range_01_09_01_10_Run_38993_RMSDiff.eps} | 
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| 220 | %\vspace{\floatsep} | 
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| 221 | %\includegraphics[width=0.47\linewidth]{MExtractTimeAndChargeSpline_Amplitude_Amplitude_Range_01_09_01_10_Run_38995_RMSDiff.eps} | 
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| 222 | %\vspace{\floatsep} | 
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| 223 | %\includegraphics[width=0.47\linewidth]{MExtractTimeAndChargeSpline_Amplitude_Amplitude_Range_01_09_01_10_Run_38996_RMSDiff.eps} | 
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| 224 | %\caption{MExtractTimeAndChargeSpline with amplitude: | 
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| 225 | %Difference in RMS (per FADC slice) between extraction algorithm | 
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| 226 | %applied on a fixed window and the corresponding pedestal RMS. | 
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| 227 | %Closed camera (left), open camera observing extra-galactic star field (right) and | 
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| 228 | %camera being illuminated by the continuous light (bottom). | 
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| 229 | %Every entry corresponds to one pixel.} | 
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| 230 | %\label{fig:amp:relrms} | 
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| 231 | %\end{figure} | 
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| 232 |  | 
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| 233 |  | 
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| 234 | %\begin{figure}[htp] | 
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| 235 | %\centering | 
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| 236 | %\includegraphics[width=0.47\linewidth]{MExtractTimeAndChargeSpline_Rise-and-Fall-Time_0.5_1.5_Range_01_10_02_12_Run_38993_RMSDiff.eps} | 
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| 237 | %\vspace{\floatsep} | 
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| 238 | %\includegraphics[width=0.47\linewidth]{MExtractTimeAndChargeSpline_Rise-and-Fall-Time_0.5_1.5_Range_01_10_02_12_Run_38995_RMSDiff.eps} | 
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| 239 | %\vspace{\floatsep} | 
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| 240 | %\includegraphics[width=0.47\linewidth]{MExtractTimeAndChargeSpline_Rise-and-Fall-Time_0.5_1.5_Range_01_10_02_12_Run_38996_RMSDiff.eps} | 
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| 241 | %\caption{MExtractTimeAndChargeSpline with integral over 2 slices: | 
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| 242 | %Difference in RMS (per FADC slice) between extraction algorithm | 
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| 243 | %applied on a fixed window and the corresponding pedestal RMS. | 
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| 244 | %Closed camera (left), open camera observing extra-galactic star field (right) and | 
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| 245 | %camera being illuminated by the continuous light (bottom). | 
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| 246 | %Every entry corresponds to one | 
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| 247 | %pixel.} | 
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| 248 | %\label{fig:int:relrms} | 
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| 249 | %\end{figure} | 
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| 250 |  | 
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| 251 |  | 
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| 252 | %\begin{figure}[htp] | 
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| 253 | %\centering | 
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| 254 | %\includegraphics[width=0.47\linewidth]{MExtractTimeAndChargeDigitalFilter_Weights_cosmics_weights.dat_Range_01_14_02_14_Run_38993_RMSDiff.eps} | 
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| 255 | %\vspace{\floatsep} | 
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| 256 | %\includegraphics[width=0.47\linewidth]{MExtractTimeAndChargeDigitalFilter_Weights_cosmics_weights.dat_Range_01_14_02_14_Run_38995_RMSDiff.eps} | 
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| 257 | %\vspace{\floatsep} | 
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| 258 | %\includegraphics[width=0.47\linewidth]{MExtractTimeAndChargeDigitalFilter_Weights_cosmics_weights.dat_Range_01_14_02_14_Run_38996_RMSDiff.eps} | 
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| 259 | %\caption{MExtractTimeAndChargeDigitalFilter: | 
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| 260 | %Difference in RMS (per FADC slice) between extraction algorithm | 
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| 261 | %applied on a fixed window and the corresponding pedestal RMS. | 
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| 262 | %Closed camera (left), open camera observing extra-galactic star field (right) and | 
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| 263 | %camera being illuminated by the continuous light (bottom). | 
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| 264 | %Every entry corresponds to one pixel.} | 
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| 265 | %\label{fig:df:relrms} | 
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| 266 | %\end{figure} | 
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| 267 |  | 
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| 268 | %\begin{landscape} | 
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| 269 | %\rotatebox{90}{% | 
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| 270 | \begin{table}[htp] | 
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| 271 | \vspace{3cm} | 
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| 272 | \small{% | 
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| 273 | \centering | 
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| 274 | \begin{tabular}{|c|c||c|c||c|c||c|c||c|c|} | 
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| 275 | \hline | 
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| 276 | \hline | 
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| 277 | \multicolumn{10}{|c|}{Resolution for $S=0$ and fixed window (units in $N_{\mathrm{phe}}$)  \rule{0mm}{6mm} \rule[-2mm]{0mm}{6mm} \hspace{-3mm}} \\ | 
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| 278 | \hline | 
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| 279 | \hline | 
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| 280 | & & \multicolumn{2}{|c|}{Closed camera} & \multicolumn{2}{|c|}{Extra-gal. NSB}  & \multicolumn{2}{|c|}{Galactic NSB}  & \multicolumn{2}{|c|}{Moon} \\ | 
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| 281 | \hline | 
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| 282 | \hline | 
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| 283 | Nr. & Name         & $R$ & $R$ &  $R$ & $R$ & $R$ & $R$ &  $R$ & $R$ \\ | 
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| 284 | &              & inner & outer & inner & outer & inner & outer & inner & outer \\ | 
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| 285 | \hline | 
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| 286 | 17  & Slid. Win. 2  & 0.3 & 0.9 &  1.2 & 2.0 &  1.5 & 2.4 &  3.0 & 5.3   \\ | 
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| 287 | 18  & Slid. Win. 4  & 0.4 & 1.2 &  1.6 & 2.7 &  2.0 & 3.3 &  3.9 & 7.3   \\ | 
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| 288 | 20  & Slid. Win. 6  & 0.5 & 1.6 &  2.0 & 3.5 &  2.4 & 4.3 &  4.7 & 9.0   \\ | 
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| 289 | 21  & Slid. Win. 8  & 0.6 & 2.0 &  2.3 & 4.1 &  2.9 & 5.0 &  5.3 & 10.1  \\ | 
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| 290 | \hline | 
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| 291 | 23  & Spline Amp.   & 0.3 & 0.8 &  1.0 & 1.8 &  1.2 & 2.2 &  2.5 & 4.9   \\ | 
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| 292 | 24  & Spline Int. 1 & 0.3 & 0.7 &  0.9 & 1.6 &  1.1 & 1.9 &  2.5 & 4.6   \\ | 
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| 293 | 25  & Spline Int. 2 & 0.3 & 0.9 &  1.2 & 2.0 &  1.5 & 2.4 &  3.0 & 5.3   \\ | 
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| 294 | 26  & Spline Int. 4 & 0.4 & 1.2 &  1.6 & 2.8 &  1.9 & 3.4 &  3.6 & 7.1   \\ | 
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| 295 | 27  & Spline Int. 6 & 0.5 & 1.6 &  1.9 & 3.6 &  2.4 & 4.2 &  4.3 & 8.7   \\ | 
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| 296 | \hline | 
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| 297 | 28  & Dig. Filt. 6  & 0.3 & 0.8 &  1.0 & 1.6 &  1.2 & 1.9 &  2.8 & 4.3   \\ | 
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| 298 | 29  & Dig. Filt. 4  & 0.3 & 0.7 &  0.9 & 1.6 &  1.1 & 1.9 &  2.5 & 4.3   \\ | 
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| 299 | \hline | 
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| 300 | \hline | 
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| 301 | \end{tabular} | 
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| 302 | \vspace{1cm} | 
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| 303 | \caption{The mean resolution $R$ for different extractors applied to a fixed window of pedestal events. | 
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| 304 | Four different conditions of night sky background are shown: | 
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| 305 | Closed camera, extra-galactic star-field, galactic star-field and almost full moon at 60$^\circ$ angular | 
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| 306 | distance from the pointing position. With the first three conditions, a simple RMS of the extracted | 
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| 307 | signals has been calculated while in the fourth case, a Gauss fit to the high part of the distribution | 
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| 308 | has been made. | 
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| 309 | The obtained values can typically vary by up to 10\% for different channels of the camera readout.} | 
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| 310 | \label{tab:ped:fw} | 
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| 311 | } | 
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| 312 | \end{table} | 
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| 313 | %} | 
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| 314 | %\end{landscape} | 
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| 315 |  | 
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| 316 |  | 
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| 317 | %%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%% | 
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| 318 |  | 
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| 319 |  | 
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| 320 |  | 
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| 321 | \subsubsection{ \label{sec:ped:slidingwindow} Application of the Signal Extractor to a Sliding Window | 
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| 322 | of Pedestal Events} | 
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| 323 |  | 
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| 324 | By applying the signal extractor with a global extraction window to pedestal events, allowing | 
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| 325 | it to ``slide'' and maximize the encountered signal, we | 
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| 326 | determine the bias $B$ and the mean-squared error $MSE$ for the case of no signal ($S=0$). | 
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| 327 | \par | 
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| 328 | In MARS, this functionality is implemented with a function-call to: \\ | 
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| 329 |  | 
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| 330 | {\textit{\bf MJPedestal::SetExtractionWithExtractor()}} \\ | 
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| 331 |  | 
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| 332 | \par | 
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| 333 | Table~\ref{tab:bias} shows the bias, the resolution and the mean-square error for all extractors using | 
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| 334 | a sliding window. In this sample, every extractor had the freedom to move 5 slices, | 
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| 335 | i.e. the global window size was fixed to five plus the extractor window size. This first line | 
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| 336 | shows the resolution of the smallest existing robust fixed window algorithm in order to give the reference | 
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| 337 | value of 2.5 and 3 photo-electrons RMS for an extra-galactic and a galactic star-field, respectively. | 
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| 338 | \par | 
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| 339 | One can see that the bias $B$ typically decreases | 
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| 340 | with increasing window size, while the error $R$ increases with | 
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| 341 | increasing window size, except for the digital filter. There is also a small difference between the obtained error | 
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| 342 | on a fixed window extraction and the one obtained from a sliding window extraction in the case of the spline and digital | 
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| 343 | filter algorithms. | 
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| 344 | The mean-squared error has an optimum somewhere in between: In the case of the | 
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| 345 | sliding window and the spline at the lowest window size, in the case of the digital filter | 
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| 346 | at 4 slices. The global winners is extractor~\#29 | 
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| 347 | (digital filter with integration of 4 slices). All sliding window extractors -- except \#21 -- | 
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| 348 | have a smaller mean-square error than the resolution of the fixed window reference extractor (row\ 1,\#4). This means | 
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| 349 | that the global error of the sliding window extractors is smaller than the one of the fixed window extractors | 
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| 350 | with 8~FADC slices even if the first have a bias. | 
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| 351 | \par | 
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| 352 | The important information for the image cleaning is the number of photo-electrons above which the probability for obtaining | 
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| 353 | a noise fluctuation is smaller than 0.3\% (3$\sigma$). We approximated that number with the formula: | 
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| 354 |  | 
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| 355 | \begin{equation} | 
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| 356 | N_{\mathrm{phe}}^{\mathrm{thres.}} \approx B + 3\cdot R | 
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| 357 | \end{equation} | 
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| 358 |  | 
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| 359 | Table~\ref{tab:bias} shows that most of the sliding window algorithms yield a smaller signal threshold than the fixed window ones, | 
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| 360 | although the first have a bias. The lowest threshold of only 4.2~photo-electrons for the extra-galactic star-field and 5.0~photo-electrons | 
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| 361 | for the galactic star-field is obtained by the digital filter fitting 4 FADC slices (extractor~\%29). | 
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| 362 | This is almost a factor 2 lower than the fixed window results. Also the spline integrating 1 FADC slice (extractor~\%24) yields almost | 
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| 363 | comparable results. | 
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| 364 |  | 
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| 365 | \begin{landscape} | 
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| 366 | %\rotatebox{90}{% | 
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| 367 | \begin{table}[htp] | 
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| 368 | \vspace{3cm} | 
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| 369 | \scriptsize{% | 
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| 370 | \centering | 
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| 371 | \begin{tabular}{|c|c|c|c|c|c|c|c|c|c|c|c|c|c|c|c|} | 
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| 372 | \hline | 
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| 373 | \hline | 
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| 374 | \multicolumn{16}{|c|}{Statistical Parameters for $S=0$ (units in $N_{\mathrm{phe}}$) \rule{0mm}{6mm} \rule[-2mm]{0mm}{6mm} \hspace{-3mm}} \\ | 
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| 375 | \hline | 
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| 376 | \hline | 
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| 377 | & & \multicolumn{4}{|c|}{Closed camera} & \multicolumn{5}{|c|}{Extra-galactic NSB}  & \multicolumn{5}{|c|}{Galactic NSB} \\ | 
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| 378 | \hline | 
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| 379 | \hline | 
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| 380 | Nr. & Name         &  $R$  & $R$ & $B$ & $\sqrt{MSE}$ &  $R$ &$R$  & $B$ & $\sqrt{MSE}$ & $B+3R$ & $R$ &  $R$& $B$ & $\sqrt{MSE}$ & $B+3R$  \\ | 
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| 381 | &              &  (FW) & (SW)& (SW)& (SW) & (FW) &(SW) & (SW)& (SW) & (99.7\% prob.) & (FW)&(SW) & (SW)&(SW) & (99.7\% prob.) \\ | 
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| 382 | \hline | 
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| 383 | \hline | 
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| 384 | 4   & Fixed Win. 8  & 1.2  & --  & 0.0 & 1.2  & 2.5  & --  & 0.0 &  2.5 & 7.5 & 3.0 &  -- & 0.0 & 3.0 & 9.0 \\ | 
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| 385 | \hline | 
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| 386 | --  & Slid. Win. 1  & 0.4  & 0.4 & 0.4 & 0.6  & 1.2  & 1.2 & 1.3 &  1.8 & 4.9 & 1.4 & 1.4 & 1.5 & 2.0 & 5.7 \\ | 
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| 387 | 17  & Slid. Win. 2  & 0.5  & 0.5 & 0.4 & 0.6  & 1.4  & 1.4 & 1.2 &  1.8 & 5.4 & 1.6 & 1.6 & 1.5 & 2.2 & 6.1 \\ | 
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| 388 | 18  & Slid. Win. 4  & 0.8  & 0.8 & 0.5 & 0.9  & 1.9  & 1.9 & 1.2 &  2.2 & 6.9 & 2.2 & 2.3 & 1.6 & 2.8 & 7.5 \\ | 
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| 389 | 20  & Slid. Win. 6  & 1.0  & 1.0 & 0.4 & 1.1  & 2.2  & 2.2 & 1.1 &  2.5 & 7.7 & 2.6 & 2.7 & 1.4 & 3.0 & 9.5 \\ | 
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| 390 | 21  & Slid. Win. 8  & 1.2  & 1.3 & 0.4 & 1.4  & 2.5  & 2.5 & 1.0 &  2.7 & 8.5 & 3.0 & 3.2 & 1.4 & 3.5 & 10.0 \\ | 
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| 391 | \hline | 
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| 392 | 23  & Spline Amp.  & 0.4  & \textcolor{red}{\bf 0.4} & 0.4 & 0.6  & 1.1  & 1.2 & 1.3 & 1.8 & 4.9 & 1.3 & 1.4 & 1.6 & 2.1 & 5.8 \\ | 
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| 393 | 24  & \textcolor{red}{\bf Spline Int. 1} & 0.4  & \textcolor{red}{\bf 0.4} & 0.3 & \textcolor{red}{\bf 0.5} & 1.0 & 1.2 & 1.0 & 1.6 & 4.6 & 1.3 & \textcolor{red}{\bf 1.3} & 1.3 & 1.8 & 5.2 \\ | 
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| 394 | 25  & Spline Int. 2 & 0.5  & 0.5 & 0.3 & 0.6  & 1.3  & 1.4 & 0.9 &  1.7 & 5.1 & 1.7 & 1.6 & 1.2 & 2.0 & 6.0 \\ | 
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| 395 | 26  & Spline Int. 4 & 0.7  & 0.7 & \textcolor{red}{\bf 0.2 } & 0.7  & 1.5  & 1.7 & \textcolor{red}{\bf 0.8} &  1.9 & 5.3 & 2.0 & 2.0 & 1.0 & 2.2 & 7.0 \\ | 
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| 396 | 27  & Spline Int. 6 & 1.0  & 1.0 & 0.3 & 1.0  & 2.0  & 2.0 & \textcolor{red}{\bf 0.8} &  2.2 & 6.8 & 2.6 & 2.5 & \textcolor{red}{\bf 0.9} & 2.7 & 8.4 \\ | 
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| 397 | \hline | 
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| 398 | 28  & Dig. Filt. 6 & 0.4   & 0.5 & 0.4 & 0.6  & 1.1  & 1.3 & 1.3 &  1.8 & 5.2 & 1.3 & 1.5 & 1.5 & 2.1 & 6.0 \\ | 
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| 399 | 29  & \textcolor{red}{\bf Dig. Filt. 4} & 0.3   & \textcolor{red}{\bf 0.4} & 0.3 & \textcolor{red}{\bf 0.5}  & 0.9  & \textcolor{red}{\bf 1.1} & 0.9 & \textcolor{red}{\bf 1.4} & \textcolor{red}{\bf 4.2} & 1.0 & \textcolor{red}{\bf 1.3} & 1.1 & \textcolor{red}{\bf 1.7} & \textcolor{red}{\bf 5.0 }\\ | 
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| 400 | \hline | 
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| 401 | \hline | 
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| 402 | \end{tabular} | 
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| 403 | \vspace{1cm} | 
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| 404 | \caption{The statistical parameters bias, resolution and mean error for the algorithms which can be applied to sliding | 
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| 405 | windows (SW) and/or fixed windows (FW) of pedestal events. | 
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| 406 | The first line displays the resolution of the smallest existing robust fixed--window extractor | 
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| 407 | for reference. All units in equiv. | 
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| 408 | photo-electrons, uncertainty: 0.1 phes. All extractors were allowed to move 5 FADC slices plus | 
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| 409 | their window size. The ``winners'' for each column are marked in red. Global winners (within the given | 
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| 410 | uncertainty) are the extractors Nr. \#24 (MExtractTimeAndChargeSpline with an integration window of | 
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| 411 | 1 FADC slice) and Nr.\#29 | 
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| 412 | (MExtractTimeAndChargeDigitalFilter with an integration window size of 4 slices)} | 
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| 413 | \label{tab:bias} | 
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| 414 | } | 
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| 415 | \end{table} | 
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| 416 | %} | 
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| 417 | \end{landscape} | 
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| 418 |  | 
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| 419 | \clearpage | 
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| 420 |  | 
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| 421 | Figures~\ref{fig:sw:distped} through~\ref{fig:df4:distped} show the | 
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| 422 | extracted pedestal distributions for some selected extractors (\#18, \#23, \#25, \#28 and \#29) | 
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| 423 | for one typical channel (pixel 100) and two background situations: Closed camera with only electronic | 
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| 424 | noise and open camera pointing to an extra-galactic source. | 
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| 425 | One can see the (asymmetric) Poisson behaviour of the | 
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| 426 | night sky background photons for the distributions with open camera. | 
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| 427 |  | 
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| 428 | \begin{figure}[htp] | 
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| 429 | \centering | 
|---|
| 430 | \includegraphics[height=0.43\textheight]{PedestalSpectrum-18-Run38993.eps} | 
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| 431 | \vspace{\floatsep} | 
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| 432 | \includegraphics[height=0.43\textheight]{PedestalSpectrum-18-Run38995.eps} | 
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| 433 | \caption{MExtractTimeAndChargeSlidingWindow with extraction window of 4 FADC slices: | 
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| 434 | Distribution of extracted "pedestals"  from pedestal run with | 
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| 435 | closed camera (top) and open camera observing an extra-galactic star field (bottom) for one channel | 
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| 436 | (pixel 100). The result obtained from a simple addition of 4 FADC | 
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| 437 | slice contents (``fundamental'') is displayed as red histogram, the one obtained from the application of | 
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| 438 | the algorithm on | 
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| 439 | a fixed window of 4 FADC slices as blue histogram (``extractor random'') and the one obtained from the | 
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| 440 | full algorithm allowed to slide within a global window of 12 slices. The obtained histogram means and | 
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| 441 | RMSs have been converted to equiv. photo-electrons.} | 
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| 442 | \label{fig:sw:distped} | 
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| 443 | \end{figure} | 
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| 444 |  | 
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| 445 |  | 
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| 446 | \begin{figure}[htp] | 
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| 447 | \centering | 
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| 448 | \includegraphics[height=0.43\textheight]{PedestalSpectrum-23-Run38993.eps} | 
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| 449 | \vspace{\floatsep} | 
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| 450 | \includegraphics[height=0.43\textheight]{PedestalSpectrum-23-Run38995.eps} | 
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| 451 | \caption{MExtractTimeAndChargeSpline with amplitude extraction: | 
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| 452 | Spectrum of extracted "pedestals"  from pedestal run with | 
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| 453 | closed camera lids (top) and open lids observing an extra-galactic star field (bottom) for one channel | 
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| 454 | (pixel 100). The result obtained from a simple addition of 2 FADC | 
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| 455 | slice contents (``fundamental'') is displayed as red histogram, the one obtained from the application | 
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| 456 | of the algorithm on a fixed window of 1 FADC slice as blue histogram  (``extractor random'') | 
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| 457 | and the one obtained from the | 
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| 458 | full algorithm allowed to slide within a global window of 12 slices. The obtained histogram means and | 
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| 459 | RMSs have been converted to equiv. photo-electrons.} | 
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| 460 | \label{fig:amp:distped} | 
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| 461 | \end{figure} | 
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| 462 |  | 
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| 463 | \begin{figure}[htp] | 
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| 464 | \centering | 
|---|
| 465 | \includegraphics[height=0.43\textheight]{PedestalSpectrum-25-Run38993.eps} | 
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| 466 | \vspace{\floatsep} | 
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| 467 | \includegraphics[height=0.43\textheight]{PedestalSpectrum-25-Run38995.eps} | 
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| 468 | \caption{MExtractTimeAndChargeSpline with integral extraction over 2 FADC slices: | 
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| 469 | Distribution of extracted "pedestals"  from pedestal run with | 
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| 470 | closed camera lids (top) and open lids observing an extra-galactic star field (bottom) for one channel | 
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| 471 | (pixel 100). The result obtained from a simple addition of 2 FADC | 
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| 472 | slice contents (``fundamental'') is displayed as red histogram, the one obtained from the application | 
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| 473 | of time-randomized weights on a fixed window of 2 FADC slices as blue histogram and the one obtained from the | 
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| 474 | full algorithm allowed to slide within a global window of 12 slices. The obtained histogram means and | 
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| 475 | RMSs have been converted to equiv. photo-electrons.} | 
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| 476 | \label{fig:int:distped} | 
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| 477 | \end{figure} | 
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| 478 |  | 
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| 479 | \begin{figure}[htp] | 
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| 480 | \centering | 
|---|
| 481 | \includegraphics[height=0.43\textheight]{PedestalSpectrum-28-Run38993.eps} | 
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| 482 | \vspace{\floatsep} | 
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| 483 | \includegraphics[height=0.43\textheight]{PedestalSpectrum-28-Run38995.eps} | 
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| 484 | \caption{MExtractTimeAndChargeDigitalFilter: Spectrum of extracted "pedestals"  from pedestal run with | 
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| 485 | closed camera lids (top) and open lids observing an extra-galactic star field (bottom) for one channel | 
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| 486 | (pixel 100). The result obtained from a simple addition of 6 FADC | 
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| 487 | slice contents (``fundamental'') is displayed as red histogram, the one obtained from the application | 
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| 488 | of time-randomized weights on a fixed window of 6 slices as blue histogram and the one obtained from the | 
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| 489 | full algorithm allowed to slide within a global window of 12 slices. The obtained histogram means and | 
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| 490 | RMSs have been converted to equiv. photo-electrons.} | 
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| 491 | \label{fig:df6:distped} | 
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| 492 | \end{figure} | 
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| 493 |  | 
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| 494 | \begin{figure}[htp] | 
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| 495 | \centering | 
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| 496 | \includegraphics[height=0.43\textheight]{PedestalSpectrum-29-Run38993.eps} | 
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| 497 | \vspace{\floatsep} | 
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| 498 | \includegraphics[height=0.43\textheight]{PedestalSpectrum-29-Run38995.eps} | 
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| 499 | \caption{MExtractTimeAndChargeDigitalFilter: Spectrum of extracted "pedestals"  from pedestal run with | 
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| 500 | closed camera lids (top) and open lids observing an extra-galactic star field (bottom) for one channel | 
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| 501 | (pixel 100). The result obtained from a simple addition of 4 FADC | 
|---|
| 502 | slice contents (``fundamental'') is displayed as red histogram, the one obtained from the application | 
|---|
| 503 | of time-randomized weights on a fixed window of 4 slices as blue histogram and the one obtained from the | 
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| 504 | full algorithm allowed to slide within a global window of 10 slices. The obtained histogram means and | 
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| 505 | RMSs have been converted to equiv. photo-electrons.} | 
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| 506 | \label{fig:df4:distped} | 
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| 507 | \end{figure} | 
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| 508 |  | 
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| 509 | \clearpage | 
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| 510 |  | 
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| 511 | \subsection{ \label{sec:ped:singlephe} Single Photo-Electron Extraction with the Digital Filter} | 
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| 512 |  | 
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| 513 | Figure~\ref{fig:df:sphespectrum} shows spectra | 
|---|
| 514 | obtained with the digital filter applied on three different global search windows. | 
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| 515 | One can clearly distinguish a pedestal peak (fitted to Gaussian with index 0) | 
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| 516 | and further, positive contributions. | 
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| 517 | \par | 
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| 518 | Because the background is determined by the single photo-electrons from the night-sky background, | 
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| 519 | the following possibilities can occur: | 
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| 520 |  | 
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| 521 | \begin{enumerate} | 
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| 522 | \item There is no ``signal'' (photo-electron) in the extraction window and the extractor | 
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| 523 | finds only electronic noise. | 
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| 524 | Usually, the returned signal charge is then negative. | 
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| 525 | \item There is one photo-electron in the extraction window and the extractor finds it. | 
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| 526 | \item There are more than one photo-electron in the extraction window, but separated by more than | 
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| 527 | two FADC slices whereupon the extractor finds the one with the highest charge (upward fluctuation) of both. | 
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| 528 | \item The extractor finds an overlap of two or more photo-electrons. | 
|---|
| 529 | \end{enumerate} | 
|---|
| 530 |  | 
|---|
| 531 | Although the probability to find a certain number of photo-electrons in a fixed window follows a | 
|---|
| 532 | Poisson distribution, the one for employing the sliding window is {\textit{not}} Poissonian. The extractor | 
|---|
| 533 | will usually find one photo-electron even if more are present in the global search window, i.e. the | 
|---|
| 534 | probability for two or more photo-electrons to occur in the global search window is much higher than | 
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| 535 | the probability for these photo-electrons to overlap in time such as to be recognized as a double | 
|---|
| 536 | or triple photo-electron pulse by the extractor. This is especially true for small extraction windows | 
|---|
| 537 | and for the digital filter. | 
|---|
| 538 |  | 
|---|
| 539 | \par | 
|---|
| 540 |  | 
|---|
| 541 | Given a global extraction window of size $\mathrm{\it WS}$ and an average rate of photo-electrons from the night-sky | 
|---|
| 542 | background $R$, we will now calculate the probability for the extractor to find zero photo-electrons in the | 
|---|
| 543 | $\mathrm{\it WS}$. The probability to find any number of $k$ photo-electrons can be written as: | 
|---|
| 544 |  | 
|---|
| 545 | \begin{equation} | 
|---|
| 546 | P(k) = \frac{e^{-R\cdot \mathrm{\it WS}} (R \cdot \mathrm{\it WS})^k}{k!} | 
|---|
| 547 | \end{equation} | 
|---|
| 548 |  | 
|---|
| 549 | and thus: | 
|---|
| 550 |  | 
|---|
| 551 | \begin{equation} | 
|---|
| 552 | P(0) = e^{-R\cdot \mathrm{\it WS}} | 
|---|
| 553 | \end{equation} | 
|---|
| 554 |  | 
|---|
| 555 | The probability to find one or more photo-electrons is then: | 
|---|
| 556 |  | 
|---|
| 557 | \begin{equation} | 
|---|
| 558 | P(>0) = 1 - e^{-R\cdot \mathrm{\it WS}} | 
|---|
| 559 | \end{equation} | 
|---|
| 560 |  | 
|---|
| 561 | In figures~\ref{fig:df:sphespectrum}, | 
|---|
| 562 | one can clearly distinguish the pedestal peak (fitted to Gaussian with index 0), | 
|---|
| 563 | corresponding to the case of  $P(0)$ and further | 
|---|
| 564 | contributions of $P(1)$ and $P(2)$ (fitted to Gaussians with index 1 and 2). | 
|---|
| 565 | One can also see that the contribution of $P(0)$ dimishes | 
|---|
| 566 | with increasing global search window size. | 
|---|
| 567 |  | 
|---|
| 568 | \begin{figure} | 
|---|
| 569 | \centering | 
|---|
| 570 | \includegraphics[height=0.3\textheight]{SinglePheSpectrum-28-Run38995-WS2.5.eps} | 
|---|
| 571 | \vspace{\floatsep} | 
|---|
| 572 | \includegraphics[height=0.3\textheight]{SinglePheSpectrum-28-Run38995-WS4.5.eps} | 
|---|
| 573 | \vspace{\floatsep} | 
|---|
| 574 | \includegraphics[height=0.3\textheight]{SinglePheSpectrum-28-Run38995-WS8.5.eps} | 
|---|
| 575 | \caption{MExtractTimeAndChargeDigitalFilter: Spectrum obtained from the extraction | 
|---|
| 576 | of a pedestal run using a sliding window of 6 FADC slices allowed to move within a window of | 
|---|
| 577 | 7 (top), 9 (center) and 13 slices. | 
|---|
| 578 | A pedestal run with galactic star background has been taken and one typical pixel (Nr. 100). | 
|---|
| 579 | One can clearly see the pedestal contribution and a further part corresponding to one or more | 
|---|
| 580 | photo-electrons.} | 
|---|
| 581 | \label{fig:df:sphespectrum} | 
|---|
| 582 | \end{figure} | 
|---|
| 583 |  | 
|---|
| 584 | In the following, we will make a short consistency test: Assuming that the spectral peaks are | 
|---|
| 585 | attributed correctly, one would expect the following relation: | 
|---|
| 586 |  | 
|---|
| 587 | \begin{equation} | 
|---|
| 588 | P(0) / P(>0) = \frac{e^{-R\cdot WS}}{1-e^{-R\cdot WS}} | 
|---|
| 589 | \end{equation} | 
|---|
| 590 |  | 
|---|
| 591 | We tested this relation assuming that the fitted area underneath the pedestal peak $\mathrm{\it Area}_0$ is | 
|---|
| 592 | proportional to $P(0)$ and the sum of the fitted areas underneath the single photo-electron peak | 
|---|
| 593 | $\mathrm{\it Area}_1$ and the double photo-electron peak $\mathrm{\it Area}_2$ proportional to $P(>0)$. We assumed | 
|---|
| 594 | that the probability for a triple photo-electron to occur is negligible. Thus, one expects: | 
|---|
| 595 |  | 
|---|
| 596 | \begin{equation} | 
|---|
| 597 | \mathrm{\it Area}_0 / (\mathrm{\it Area}_1 + \mathrm{\it Area}_2 ) = \frac{e^{-R\cdot WS}}{1-e^{-R\cdot WS}} | 
|---|
| 598 | \end{equation} | 
|---|
| 599 |  | 
|---|
| 600 | We estimated the effective window size $\mathrm{\it WS}$ as the sum of the range in which the digital filter | 
|---|
| 601 | amplitude weights are greater than 0.5 (1.5 FADC slices) and the global search window minus the | 
|---|
| 602 | size of the window size of the weights (which is 6 FADC slices). Figure~\ref{fig:df:ratiofit} | 
|---|
| 603 | shows the result for two different levels of night-sky background. The fitted rates deliver | 
|---|
| 604 | 0.08 and 0.1 phes/ns, respectively. These rates are about 50\% lower than those obtained | 
|---|
| 605 | from the November 2004 test campaign. However, we should take into account that the method is at | 
|---|
| 606 | the limit of distinguishing single photo-electrons. It may occur often that a single photo-electron | 
|---|
| 607 | signal is too low in order to get recognized as such. We tried various pixels and found that | 
|---|
| 608 | some of them do not permit to apply this method at all. The ones which succeed, however, yield about | 
|---|
| 609 | the same fitted rates. To conclude, one may say that there is consistency within the double-peak | 
|---|
| 610 | structure of the pedestal spectrum found by the digital filter which can be explained by the fact that | 
|---|
| 611 | single photo-electrons are separated from the pure electronics noise. | 
|---|
| 612 | \par | 
|---|
| 613 |  | 
|---|
| 614 | \begin{figure}[htp] | 
|---|
| 615 | \centering | 
|---|
| 616 | \includegraphics[height=0.4\textheight]{SinglePheRatio-28-Run38995.eps} | 
|---|
| 617 | \vspace{\floatsep} | 
|---|
| 618 | \includegraphics[height=0.4\textheight]{SinglePheRatio-28-Run39258.eps} | 
|---|
| 619 | \caption{MExtractTimeAndChargeDigitalFilter: Fit to the ratio of the area beneath the pedestal peak and | 
|---|
| 620 | the single and double photo-electron(s) peak(s) with the extraction algorithm | 
|---|
| 621 | applied on a sliding window of different sizes. | 
|---|
| 622 | In the top plot, a pedestal run with extra-galactic star background has been taken and in the bottom, | 
|---|
| 623 | a galactic star background. An typical pixel (Nr. 100) has been used. | 
|---|
| 624 | Above, a rate of 0.08 phe/ns and below, a rate of 0.1 phe/ns has been obtained.} | 
|---|
| 625 | \label{fig:df:ratiofit} | 
|---|
| 626 | \end{figure} | 
|---|
| 627 |  | 
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| 628 | Figure~\ref{fig:df:convfit} shows the obtained ``conversion factors'' and ``F-Factor'' computed as~\cite{MAGIC-calibration}: | 
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| 629 |  | 
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| 630 | \begin{eqnarray} | 
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| 631 | c_{phe} &=& \frac{1}{\mu_1 - \mu_0} \\ | 
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| 632 | F_{phe} &=& \sqrt{1 + \frac{\sigma_1^2 - \sigma_0^2}{(\mu_1 - \mu_0)^2} } | 
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| 633 | \end{eqnarray} | 
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| 634 |  | 
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| 635 | where $\mu_0$ denotes the mean position of the pedestal peak and $\mu_1$ the mean position of the (assumed) | 
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| 636 | single photo-electron peak. The obtained conversion factors are systematically lower than the ones | 
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| 637 | obtained from the standard calibration and decrease with increasing window size. This is consistent | 
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| 638 | with the assumption that the digital filter finds the most upward fluctuating pulse out of several. Therefore, | 
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| 639 | $\mu_1$ is biased against higher values. The F-Factor is also systematically low (however with huge error bars), | 
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| 640 | which is also consistent | 
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| 641 | with the assumption that the spacing between $\mu_1$ and $\mu_0$ is artificially high. | 
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| 642 | Unfortunately, the error bars are too high for a ``calibration'' of the F-Factor. | 
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| 643 | \par | 
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| 644 | In conclusion, the digital filter is at the edge of being able to see single photo-electrons, | 
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| 645 | however a single photo-electron calibration cannot yet be done with the current FADC system because the | 
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| 646 | resolution is too poor. These limitations might be overcome if a higher sampling speed is used and the artificial | 
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| 647 | pulse shaping removed. We expect to improve this method considerably with the new 2\,GSamples/s~FADC readout of MAGIC. | 
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| 648 |  | 
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| 649 | \begin{figure}[htp] | 
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| 650 | \centering | 
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| 651 | \includegraphics[height=0.4\textheight]{ConvFactor-28-Run38995.eps} | 
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| 652 | \vspace{\floatsep} | 
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| 653 | \includegraphics[height=0.4\textheight]{FFactor-28-Run38995.eps} | 
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| 654 | \caption{MExtractTimeAndChargeDigitalFilter: Obtained conversion factors (top) and F-Factors (bottom) | 
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| 655 | from the position and width of | 
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| 656 | the fitted Gaussian mean of the single photo-electron peak and the pedestal peak depending on | 
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| 657 | the applied global extraction window sizes. | 
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| 658 | A pedestal run with extra-galactic star background has been taken and | 
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| 659 | an typical pixel (Nr. 100) used. The conversion factor obtained from the | 
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| 660 | standard calibration is shown as a reference line. The obtained conversion factors are systematically | 
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| 661 | lower than the reference one.} | 
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| 662 | \label{fig:df:convfit} | 
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| 663 | \end{figure} | 
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| 664 |  | 
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| 665 |  | 
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| 666 |  | 
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| 667 | %%% Local Variables: | 
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| 668 | %%% mode: latex | 
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| 669 | %%% TeX-master: "MAGIC_signal_reco" | 
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| 670 | %%% TeX-master: "MAGIC_signal_reco" | 
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| 671 | %%% TeX-master: "MAGIC_signal_reco" | 
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| 672 | %%% TeX-master: "MAGIC_signal_reco" | 
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| 673 | %%% End: | 
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