585 research outputs found
Measurement of non-Gaussian shot noise: influence of the environment
We present the first measurements of the third moment of the voltage
fluctuations in a conductor. This technique can provide new and complementary
information on the electronic transport in conducting systems. The measurement
was performed on non-superconducting tunnel junctions as a function of voltage
bias, for various temperatures and bandwidths up to 1GHz. The data demonstrate
the significant effect of the electromagnetic environment of the sample.Comment: 13 pages, for the SPIE International Symposium on Fluctuations and
Noise, Maspalomas, Gran Canaria, Spain (May 2004
Noise Thermal Impedance of a Diffusive Wire
The current noise density S of a conductor in equilibrium, the Johnson noise,
is determined by its temperature T: S=4kTG with G the conductance. The sample's
noise temperature Tn=S/(4kG) generalizes T for a system out of equilibrium. We
introduce the "noise thermal impedance" of a sample as the amplitude of the
oscillation of Tn when heated by an oscillating power. For a macroscopic
sample, it is the usual thermal impedance. We show for a diffusive wire how
this (complex) frequency-dependent quantity gives access to the electron-phonon
interaction time in a long wire and to the diffusion time in a shorter one, and
how its real part may also give access to the electron-electron inelastic time.
These times are not simply accessible from the frequency dependence of S
itself.Comment: 4 pages, 2 figure
Bolometric and non-bolometric radio frequency detection in a metallic single-walled carbon nanotube
We characterize radio frequency detection in a high-quality metallic
single-walled carbon nanotube. At a bath temperature of 77 K, only bolometric
(thermal) detection is seen. At a bath temperature of 4.2 K and low bias
current, the response is due instead to the electrical nonlinearity of the
non-ohmic contacts. At higher bias currents, the contacts recover ohmic
behavior and the observed response agrees well with the calculated bolometric
responsivity. The bolometric response is expected to operate at terahertz
frequencies, and we discuss some of the practical issues associated with
developing high frequency detectors based on carbon nanotubes.Comment: 11 pages (double-spaced), 3 figure
Environmental effects in the third moment of voltage fluctuations in a tunnel junction
We present the first measurements of the third moment of the voltage
fluctuations in a conductor. This technique can provide new and complementary
information on the electronic transport in conducting systems. The measurement
was performed on non-superconducting tunnel junctions as a function of voltage
bias, for various temperatures and bandwidths up to 1GHz. The data demonstrate
the significant effect of the electromagnetic environment of the sample.Comment: Major revision. More experimental results. New interpretation. 4
pages, 3 figure
Energy resolution of terahertz single-photon-sensitive bolometric detectors
We report measurements of the energy resolution of ultra-sensitive
superconducting bolometric detectors. The device is a superconducting titanium
nanobridge with niobium contacts. A fast microwave pulse is used to simulate a
single higher-frequency photon, where the absorbed energy of the pulse is equal
to the photon energy. This technique allows precise calibration of the input
coupling and avoids problems with unwanted background photons. Present devices
have an intrinsic full-width at half-maximum energy resolution of approximately
23 terahertz, near the predicted value due to intrinsic thermal fluctuation
noise.Comment: 11 pages (double-spaced), 5 figures; minor revision
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