53 research outputs found
Non-thermal response of YBCO thin films to picosecond THz pulses
The photoresponse of YBa2Cu3O7-d thin film microbridges with thicknesses
between 15 and 50 nm was studied in the optical and terahertz frequency range.
The voltage transients in response to short radiation pulses were recorded in
real time with a resolution of a few tens of picoseconds. The bridges were
excited by either femtosecond pulses at a wavelength of 0.8 \mu m or broadband
(0.1 - 1.5 THz) picosecond pulses of coherent synchrotron radiation. The
transients in response to optical radiation are qualitatively well explained in
the framework of the two-temperature model with a fast component in the
picosecond range and a bolometric nanosecond component whose decay time depends
on the film thickness. The transients in the THz regime showed no bolometric
component and had amplitudes up to three orders of magnitude larger than the
two-temperature model predicts. Additionally THz-field dependent transients in
the absence of DC bias were observed. We attribute the response in the THz
regime to a rearrangement of vortices caused by high-frequency currents
Real-time measurement of picosecond THz pulses by an ultra-fast YBaCuO detection system
The temporal evolution of picosecond THz pulses generated at ANKA, the electron storage ring of
the Karlsruhe Institute of Technology, has been measured in real-time using an ultra-fast
YBaCuO detection system. YBaCuO thin-film detectors with 30 nm thickness were
patterned to microbridges (2 lm long, 4.5 lm wide) and embedded into a planar log-spiral THz
antenna. The detectors were glued on a silicon lens and installed in an ultra-fast readout system
with a temporal resolution of 15 ps (full width at half maximum). Detector responses as short
as 17 ps were recorded showing very good agreement with the expected storage ring bunch lengths
Superconducting YBaCuO Thin Film Detectors for Picosecond THz Pulses
Ultra-fast THz detectors from superconducting YBCO thin films were developed to monitor picosecond THz pulses. YBCO thin films were optimized by the introduction of CeO2 and PrBaCuO buffer layers. The transition temperature of 10 nm thick films reaches 79 K. A 15 nm thick YBCO microbridge (transition temperature—83 K, critical current density at 77 K—2.4 MA/cm2) embedded in a planar log-spiral antenna was used to detect pulsed THz radiation of the ANKA storage ring. First time resolved measurements of the multi-bunch filling
pattern are presented
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