High-significance Sunyaev-Zel’dovich measurement: Abell 1914 seen with the Arcminute Microkelvin Imager$^*$
\mnras 369 (2006) L1-L4
Characterising the electrothermal properties of microstrip-coupled TES detectors. - art. no. 627507
P SOC PHOTO-OPT INS 6275 (2006) 27507-27507
Abstract:
Microstrip-coupled Transition Edge Sensors (TESs) are important because they can be combined with waveguide-horn technology to produce sensitive bolometric detectors with well-defined, single-mode beam patterns and polarisation characteristics. They also allow superconducting RF filters to be included on the detector chips. Our own design of TES uses a finline taper to transform between waveguide and superconducting Nb microstrip. The microstrip transports the signal to a matched Au-Cu resistor, which is deposited on a thermally isolated SiN membrane. The dissipated RF power causes the resistance of a Mo-Cu TES bilayer to increase, and the resulting reduction in bias current is read out by a SQUID. We have fabricated TES bilayers with critical temperatures of 400 to 600mK, and deduced dark NEPs as low as 3 x 10(-17)W/root Hz at 150GHz. In this paper we describe a number of experiments that were carried out in order to investigate the electrothermal behaviour of microstrip-coupled TESs. We show that the electrothermal behaviour of microstrip-coupled TESs can be as good as that of free-space TESs, and therefore that they are suitable for high-performance astronomical applications.Investigation of planar switches for large format CMB polarization instruments - art. no. 627525
P SOC PHOTO-OPT INS 6275 (2006) 27525-27525
Abstract:
Several technologies are now being considered for modulating the polarization in various B-mode instruments, including rotating quasioptical half-wave plates in front of the focal plane array, rotating waveguide half-wave plates and Faraday rotators. It is not at all clear that any of these techniques is feasible without heavy penalty in cost or performance. A potentially much more efficient method is to use a pseudo-correlation polarimeter in conjunction with a planar circuit phase switch.We investigate three different devices for use as mm-wave switches, SIS tunnel junctions, capacitively coupled superconducting nanostrips and RF MEMS. The SIS tunnel junction switches operate by switching between two different bias voltages, while the nanostrip switch operates by changing the impedance of a resonant circuit by driving the nanostrip from the superconducting to normal state. In each case the RF signal sees two substantially different complex impedance states, hence could be switched from one transmission line branch to another. In MEMS this is achieved by mechanical movement of one plate of a parallel plate capacitor system. Although RF MEMS have been reported at high microwave and low mm-wave frequencies, in this work we have investigated cryogenic MEMS for operation at high mm-wave frequencies (225 GHz) using superconducting transmission lines.We present and compare designs and simulations of the performance of phase switches based on all three switching C, technologies, as well as preliminary experimental results for each of the switches. Finally we also present designs of phase shift circuits that translates the on/off switching into phase modulation.TES imaging array technology for ClOVER - art. no. 627524
P SOC PHOTO-OPT INS 6275 (2006) 27524-27524
Abstract:
ClOVER is an experiment which aims to detect the signature of gravitational waves from inflation by measuring the B-mode polarization of the cosmic microwave background. CLOVER consists of three telescopes operating at 97, 150, and 220 GHz. The 97-GHz telescope has 160 horns in its focal plane while the 150 and 220-GHz telescopes have 256 horns each. The horns are arranged in a hexagonal array and feed a polarimeter which uses finline-coupled TES bolometers as detectors. To detect the two polarizations the 97-GHz telescope has 320 detectors while the 150 and 220-GHz telescopes have 512 detectors each. To achieve the required NEPs the detectors are cooled to 100 mK for the 97 and 150-GHz polarimeters and 230 mK for the 220-GHz polarimeter. Each detector is fabricated as a single chip to guarantee fully functioning focal planes. The detectors are contained in linear modules made of copper which form split-block waveguides. The detector modules contain 16 or 20 detectors each for compatibility with the hexagonal arrays of horns in the telescopes' focal planes. Each detector module contains a time-division SQUID multiplexer to read out the detectors. Further amplification of the multiplexed signals is provided by SQUID series arrays. The first prototype detectors for ClOVER operate with a bath temperature of 230 mK and are used to validate the detector design as well as the polarimeter technology. We describe the design of the ClOVER detectors, detector blocks, and readout, and give an update on the detector development.Clover experiment: The receiver block
EAS PUBLICATIONS 14 (2005) 245-250