5,366 research outputs found

    Design of Cryogenic SiGe Low-Noise Amplifiers

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    This paper describes a method for designing cryogenic silicon-germanium (SiGe) transistor low-noise amplifiers and reports record microwave noise temperature, i.e., 2 K, measured at the module connector interface with a 50-Ω generator. A theory for the relevant noise sources in the transistor is derived from first principles to give the minimum possible noise temperature and optimum generator impedance in terms of dc measured current gain and transconductance. These measured dc quantities are then reported for an IBM SiGe BiCMOS-8HP transistor at temperatures from 295 to 15 K. The measured and modeled noise and gain for both a single- and two-transistor cascode amplifier in the 0.2-3-GHz range are then presented. The noise model is then combined with the transistor equivalent-circuit elements in a circuit simulator and the noise in the frequency range up to 20 GHz is compared with that of a typical InP HEMT

    The NuTeV Anomaly, Lepton Universality, and Non-Universal Neutrino-Gauge Couplings

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    In previous studies we found that models with flavor-universal suppression of the neutrino-gauge couplings are compatible with NuTeV and Z-pole data. In this paper we expand our analysis to obtain constraints on flavor-dependent coupling suppression by including lepton universality data from W, tau, pi and K decays in fits to model parameters. We find that the data are consistent with a variety of patterns of coupling suppression. In particular, in scenarios in which the suppression arises from the mixing of light neutrinos with heavy gauge singlet states (neutrissimos), we find patterns of flavor-dependent coupling suppression which are also consistent with constraints from mu -> e gamma.Comment: REVTeX4, 25 pages, 10 postscript figures. Updated fits using the new top mass. Updated figures. Extended discussion on the status of the determination of B(tau->pi nu

    A 0.1–5 GHz Cryogenic SiGe MMIC LNA

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    In this letter, the design and measurement of the first SiGe integrated-circuit LNA specifically designed for operation at cryogenic temperatures is presented. At room temperature, the circuit provides greater than 25.8 dB of gain with an average noise temperature (T_e) of 76 K (NF = 1 dB) and S11 of -9 dB for frequencies in the 0.1-5 GHz band. At 15 K, the amplifier has greater than 29.6 dB of gain with an average Te of 4.3 K and S11 of -14.6 dB for frequencies in the 0.1-5 GHz range. To the authors' knowledge, this is the lowest noise ever reported for a silicon integrated circuit operating in the low microwave range and the first matched wideband cryogenic integrated circuit LNA that covers frequencies as low as 0.1 GHz

    A 0.5-20GHz quadrature downconverter

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    A quadrature downconverter with 4GHz IF bandwidth and working over the 0.5–20GHz RF frequency range has been designed, fabricated, and tested. The downconverter uses a frequency doubling and dividing scheme to generate quadrature local oscillator signals from 0.5–17GHz and a pair of Gilbert-cell mixers to perform downconversion. When the IF outputs are combined with a commercial quadrature hybrid, the mixer achieves an image rejection ratio greater than 35dB over the entire band with no on-chip calibration or tuning. The active die area is approximately 0.5 x 1 mm^2

    Experimental cryogenic modeling and noise of SiGe HBTs

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    SiGe devices are an exciting contender for extremely low noise, cryogenically cooled amplifiers. This paper begins with a procedure for extracting a simple equivalent circuit model capable of accurately describing SiGe HBT devices. Next, small-signal modeling results obtained for a 3×0.12×18um^2 SiGe HBT at 15, 40, 77, 120, 200, and 300K are presented along with discussion of performance enhancements due to cooling of the device. Finally, the modeled noise performance is presented as a function of temperature and frequency using the concept of minimum cascaded noise temperature, a figure of merit which incorporates both noise temperature and gain

    Constraints on R-parity violating couplings from LEP/SLD hadronic observables

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    We analyze the one loop corrections to hadronic Z decays in an R-parity violating extension to the Minimal Supersymmetric Standard Model (MSSM). Performing a global fit to all the hadronic observables at the Z-peak, we obtain stringent constraints on the R-violating couplings constants lambda' and lambda''. As a result of the strong constraints from the b asymmetry parameters A_b and A_FB(b), we find that the couplings lambda'{i31}, lambda'{i32}, and lambda''{321} are ruled out at the 1 sigma level, and that lambda'{i33} and lambda''{33i} are ruled out at the 2 sigma level. We also obtain Bayesian confidence limits for the R-violating couplings.Comment: 30 pages, 19 postscript figures, REVTeX, new section 8 on Bayesian confidence limits adde

    Electroweak and QCD corrections to Higgs production via vector-boson fusion at the LHC

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    The radiative corrections of the strong and electroweak interactions are calculated at next-to-leading order for Higgs-boson production in the weak-boson-fusion channel at hadron colliders. Specifically, the calculation includes all weak-boson fusion and quark--antiquark annihilation diagrams to Higgs-boson production in association with two hard jets, including all corresponding interferences. The results on the QCD corrections confirm that previously made approximations of neglecting s-channel diagrams and interferences are well suited for predictions of Higgs production with dedicated vector-boson fusion cuts at the LHC. The electroweak corrections, which also include real corrections from incoming photons and leading heavy-Higgs-boson effects at two-loop order, are of the same size as the QCD corrections, viz. typically at the level of 5-10% for a Higgs-boson mass up to \sim 700 GeV. In general, both types of corrections do not simply rescale differential distributions, but induce distortions at the level of 10%. The discussed corrections have been implemented in a flexible Monte Carlo event generator.Comment: 33 pages, LaTeX, 24 postscript figure
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