A repository & source of cutting edge news about emerging terahertz technology, it's commercialization & innovations in THz devices, quality & process control, medical diagnostics, security, astronomy, communications, applications in graphene, metamaterials, CMOS, compressive sensing, 3d printing, and the Internet of Nanothings. NOTHING POSTED IS INVESTMENT ADVICE! REPOSTED COPYRIGHT IS FOR EDUCATIONAL USE.
Pages- Terahertz Imaging & Detection
▼
Saturday, July 28, 2018
Abstract-Development of aluminum LEKIDs for ballooon-borne far-infrared spectroscopy (Conference Presentation)
Alyssa Barlis; Steven Hailey-Dunsheath; James E. Aguirre; Charles M. Bradford, Joseph G. Redford, Tashalee S. Billings, Henry G. LeDuc;, Christopher M. McKenney, Matthew I. Hollister,
https://www.spiedigitallibrary.org/conference-proceedings-of-spie/10708/107080V/Development-of-aluminum-LEKIDs-for-ballooon-borne-far-infrared-spectroscopy/10.1117/12.2311394.short?SSO=1
We are developing lumped-element kinetic inductance detectors (LEKIDs) designed to achieve background-limited sensitivity for far-infrared (FIR) spectroscopy on a stratospheric balloon. The Spectroscopic Terahertz Airborne Receiver for Far-InfraRed Exploration (STARFIRE) will study the evolution of dusty galaxies with observations of the [CII] 158 micron and other atomic fine-structure transitions at z = 0.5 - 1.5, both through direct observations of individual luminous infrared galaxies, and in blind surveys using the technique of line intensity mapping. The spectrometer requires large format arrays of dual-polarization-sensitive detectors with NEPs of 1e-17 W/sqrt(Hz). We pattern the LEKIDs in 20-nm aluminum film, and use an array of profiled feedhorns to couple optical radiation onto the meandered inductors. A backshort etched from the backside to a buried oxide layer insures high absorption efficiency without additional matching layers. Initial testing on small sub-arrays has demonstrated a high device yield and median NEP of 4e-18 W/sqrt(Hz). We describe the development and characterization of kilo-pixel arrays using a combination of dark noise measurements and optical response with our cryogenic blackbody.
No comments:
Post a Comment
Please share your thoughts. Leave a comment.