As described in Section 7.7, the STIS MAMA detectors would suffer damage at high local and global count rates. The MAMA detectors also suffer uncorrectable non-linearity at similar count rates (see
Section 7.5.4). There are therefore configuration-specific count rate limits for all observations that use the MAMA detectors; sources brighter than allowed by the limits
cannot be observed in that configuration.
The STIS CCDs are not subject to the same bright object constraints, as the CCD cannot be damaged by observations of bright sources. At high
accumulated count/pix levels, however, the CCD saturates and charge bleeds along the columns. When
CCDGAIN=4, the saturated counts can be recovered by summing over the pixels bled into, and this spatially integrated count rate remains linear with exposure level (see
STIS ISR 1999-05). This is not true for
CCDGAIN=1. As described previously (see
Section 7.3.2), CCD saturation can be avoided by keeping exposure times short when observing bright targets. The minimum exposure time for CCD observations (0.1 second) dictates the maximum source brightness which can be observed without saturating.
The only way to use STIS to observe a source that is too bright is to use a configuration which reduces the flux from the target, bringing it into the observable regime. The options available to achieve this reduction are: