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Frequency multiplexed superconducting quantum interference device readout of large bolometer arrays for cosmic microwave background measurements.

Authors :
Dobbs MA
Lueker M
Aird KA
Bender AN
Benson BA
Bleem LE
Carlstrom JE
Chang CL
Cho HM
Clarke J
Crawford TM
Crites AT
Flanigan DI
de Haan T
George EM
Halverson NW
Holzapfel WL
Hrubes JD
Johnson BR
Joseph J
Keisler R
Kennedy J
Kermish Z
Lanting TM
Lee AT
Leitch EM
Luong-Van D
McMahon JJ
Mehl J
Meyer SS
Montroy TE
Padin S
Plagge T
Pryke C
Richards PL
Ruhl JE
Schaffer KK
Schwan D
Shirokoff E
Spieler HG
Staniszewski Z
Stark AA
Vanderlinde K
Vieira JD
Vu C
Westbrook B
Williamson R
Source :
The Review of scientific instruments [Rev Sci Instrum] 2012 Jul; Vol. 83 (7), pp. 073113.
Publication Year :
2012

Abstract

A technological milestone for experiments employing transition edge sensor bolometers operating at sub-Kelvin temperature is the deployment of detector arrays with 100s-1000s of bolometers. One key technology for such arrays is readout multiplexing: the ability to read out many sensors simultaneously on the same set of wires. This paper describes a frequency-domain multiplexed readout system which has been developed for and deployed on the APEX-SZ and South Pole Telescope millimeter wavelength receivers. In this system, the detector array is divided into modules of seven detectors, and each bolometer within the module is biased with a unique ∼MHz sinusoidal carrier such that the individual bolometer signals are well separated in frequency space. The currents from all bolometers in a module are summed together and pre-amplified with superconducting quantum interference devices operating at 4 K. Room temperature electronics demodulate the carriers to recover the bolometer signals, which are digitized separately and stored to disk. This readout system contributes little noise relative to the detectors themselves, is remarkably insensitive to unwanted microphonic excitations, and provides a technology pathway to multiplexing larger numbers of sensors.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
1089-7623
Volume :
83
Issue :
7
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
The Review of scientific instruments
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
22852677
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1063/1.4737629