Single photon detection of 1.5 THz radiation with the quantum capacitance detector

Nature Astronomy(2018)

Cited 70|Views20
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Abstract
Far-infrared spectroscopy can reveal secrets of galaxy evolution and heavy-element enrichment throughout cosmic time, prompting astronomers worldwide to design cryogenic space telescopes for far-infrared spectroscopy. The most challenging aspect is a far-infrared detector that is both exquisitely sensitive (limited by the zodiacal-light noise in a narrow wavelength band, λ/Δλ ~1,000) and array-able to tens of thousands of pixels. We present the quantum capacitance detector, a superconducting device adapted from quantum computing applications in which photon-produced free electrons in a superconductor tunnel into a small capacitive island embedded in a resonant circuit. The quantum capacitance detector has an optically measured noise equivalent power below 10−20 W Hz−1/2 at 1.5 THz, making it the most sensitive far-infrared detector ever demonstrated. We further demonstrate individual far-infrared photon counting, confirming the excellent sensitivity and suitability for cryogenic space astrophysics. The authors present a photon detector suitable for terahertz astronomy, with very high sensitivity, low power consumption and the ability to be configured into arrays. This device is demonstrably able to count individual far-infrared photons.
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Key words
Astronomical instrumentation,Superconducting devices,Physics,general,Astronomy,Astrophysics and Cosmology
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