The ambitious science goals of the Large Synoptic Survey Telescope (LSST)
have motivated a search for new and unexpected sources of systematic error in
the LSST camera. Flat-field images are a rich source of data on sensor
anomalies, although such effects are typically dwarfed by shot noise in a
single flat field. After combining many (∼500) such images into
`ultraflats' to reduce the impact of shot noise, we perform photon transfer
analysis on a pixel-by-pixel basis and observe no spatial structure in pixel
linearity or gain at light levels of 100 ke− and below. At 125 ke−, a
columnar structure is observed in the gain map--we attribute this to a
flux-dependent charge transfer inefficiency. We also probe small-scale
variations in effective pixel size by analyzing pixel-neighbor correlations in
ultraflat images, where we observe clear evidence of intrinsic variation in
effective pixel size in an LSST prototype sensor near the ∼.3% level.Comment: 8 pages, 6 figures, Submitted to the proceedings of "Precision
Astronomy with Fully Depleted CCDs", held at Brookhaven National Laboratory,
December 4-5, 201