Direct spectroscopic biosignature characterization (hereafter "biosignature
characterization") will be a major focus for future space observatories
equipped with coronagraphs or starshades. Our aim in this article is to provide
an introduction to potential detector and cooling technologies for biosignature
characterization. We begin by reviewing the needs. These include nearly
noiseless photon detection at flux levels as low as
<0.001photonss−1pixel−1 in the visible and
near-IR. We then discuss potential areas for further testing and/or development
to meet these needs using non-cryogenic detectors (EMCCD, HgCdTe array, HgCdTe
APD array), and cryogenic single photon detectors (MKID arrays and TES
microcalorimeter arrays). Non-cryogenic detectors are compatible with the
passive cooling that is strongly preferred by coronagraphic missions, but would
add non-negligible noise. Cryogenic detectors would require active cooling, but
in return deliver nearly quantum limited performance. Based on the flight
dynamics of past NASA missions, we discuss reasonable vibration expectations
for a large UV-Optical-IR space telescope (LUVOIR) and preliminary cooling
concepts that could potentially fit into a vibration budget without being the
largest element. We believe that a cooler that meets the stringent vibration
needs of a LUVOIR is also likely to meet those of a starshade-based Habitable
Exoplanet Imaging Mission.Comment: 31 pages, 6 figures, and 4 tables. Submitted to the Journal of
Astronomical Telescopes, Instruments, and System