468 research outputs found
Recent advances in superconducting-mixer simulations
Over the last few years, considerable progress have been made in the development of techniques for fabricating high-quality superconducting circuits, and this success, together with major advances in the theoretical understanding of quantum detection and mixing at millimeter and submillimeter wavelengths, has made the development of CAD techniques for superconducting nonlinear circuits an important new enterprise. For example, arrays of quasioptical mixers are now being manufactured, where the antennas, matching networks, filters and superconducting tunnel junctions are all fabricated by depositing niobium and a variety of oxides on a single quartz substrate. There are no adjustable tuning elements on these integrated circuits, and therefore, one must be able to predict their electrical behavior precisely. This requirement, together with a general interest in the generic behavior of devices such as direct detectors and harmonic mixers, has lead us to develop a range of CAD tools for simulating the large-signal, small-signal, and noise behavior of superconducting tunnel junction circuits
Simulations of partially coherent focal plane imaging arrays: Fisher matrix approach to performance evaluation
Focal plane arrays of bolometers are increasingly employed in astronomy at
far--infrared to millimetre wavelengths. The focal plane fields and the
detectors are both partially coherent in these systems, but no account has
previously been taken of the effect of partial coherence on array performance.
In this paper, we use our recently developed coupled--mode theory of detection
together with Fisher information matrix techniques from signal processing to
characterize the behaviour of partially coherent imaging arrays. We investigate
the effects of the size and coherence length of both the source and the
detectors, and the packing density of the array, on the amount of information
that can be extracted from observations with such arrays.Comment: 14 pages, 7 figures, submitted to MNRAS 7th March 200
Embedding impedance approximations in the analysis of SIS mixers
Future millimeter-wave radio astronomy instruments will use arrays of many SIS receivers, either as focal plane arrays on individual radio telescopes, or as individual receivers on the many antennas of radio interferometers. Such applications will require broadband integrated mixers without mechanical tuners. To produce such mixers, it will be necessary to improve present mixer design techniques, most of which use the three-frequency approximation to Tucker's quantum mixer theory. This paper examines the adequacy of three approximations to Tucker's theory: (1) the usual three-frequency approximation which assumes a sinusoidal LO voltage at the junction, and a short-circuit at all frequencies above the upper sideband; (2) a five-frequency approximation which allows two LO voltage harmonics and five small-signal sidebands; and (3) a quasi five-frequency approximation in which five small-signal sidebands are allowed, but the LO voltage is assumed sinusoidal. These are compared with a full harmonic-Newton solution of Tucker's equations, including eight LO harmonics and their corresponding sidebands, for realistic SIS mixer circuits. It is shown that the accuracy of the three approximations depends strongly on the value of omega R(sub N)C for the SIS junctions used. For large omega R(sub N)C, all three approximations approach the eight-harmonic solution. For omega R(sub N)C values in the range 0.5 to 10, the range of most practical interest, the quasi five-frequency approximation is a considerable improvement over the three-frequency approximation, and should be suitable for much design work. For the realistic SIS mixers considered here, the five-frequency approximation gives results very close to those of the eight-harmonic solution. Use of these approximations, where appropriate, considerably reduces the computational effort needed to analyze an SIS mixer, and allows the design and optimization of mixers using a personal computer
Modal decomposition of astronomical images with application to shapelets
The decomposition of an image into a linear combination of digitised basis
functions is an everyday task in astronomy. A general method is presented for
performing such a decomposition optimally into an arbitrary set of digitised
basis functions, which may be linearly dependent, non-orthogonal and
incomplete. It is shown that such circumstances may result even from the
digitisation of continuous basis functions that are orthogonal and complete. In
particular, digitised shapelet basis functions are investigated and are shown
to suffer from such difficulties. As a result the standard method of performing
shapelet analysis produces unnecessarily inaccurate decompositions. The optimal
method presented here is shown to yield more accurate decompositions in all
cases.Comment: 12 pages, 17 figures, submitted to MNRA
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Exploring the performance of thin-film superconducting multilayers as kinetic inductance detectors for low-frequency detection
We have solved numerically the diffusive Usadel equations that describe the spatially varying superconducting proximity effect in Ti-Al thin-film bi- and trilayers with thickness values that are suitable for kinetic inductance detectors (KIDs) to operate as photon detectors with detection thresholds in the frequency range of 50-90 GHz. Using Nam's extension of the Mattis-Bardeen calculation of the superconductor complex conductivity, we show how to calculate the surface impedance for the spatially varying case, and hence the surface impedance quality factor. In addition, we calculate energy-and spatially-averaged quasiparticle lifetimes at temperatures well-below the transition temperature and compare to calculation in Al. Our results for the pair-breaking threshold demonstrate differences between bilayers and trilayers with the same total film thicknesses. We also predict high quality factors and long multilayer-averaged quasiparticle recombination times compared to thin-film Al. Our calculations give a route for designing KIDs to operate in this scientifically-important frequency regime
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