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The Simons Observatory Microwave SQUID Multiplexing Detector Module Design

Authors :
Shannon M. Duff
Sarah Marie Bruno
Kaiwen Zheng
Jason E. Austermann
Heather McCarrick
Suzanne T. Staggs
Zachary Atkins
Sara M. Simon
Michael D. Niemack
Megan Gralla
D. Dutcher
Johannes Hubmayr
John A. B. Mates
Bradley R. Johnson
Zachary B. Huber
Leila R. Vale
Nicholas F. Cothard
Jake Connors
A. M. Kofman
Steve K. Choi
Kam Arnold
Nicholas Galitzki
Tammy J. Lucas
Jeff Van Lanen
Kevin D. Crowley
Shawn W. Henderson
Aritoki Suzuki
Yuhan Wang
C. Yu
Edward D. Young
Simon Dicker
Edward J. Wollack
Akito Kusaka
Joel N. Ullom
Bradley Dober
Erin Healy
Zeeshan Ahmed
John Orlowski-Scherer
Adrian T. Lee
Jeffrey Iuliano
Cody J. Duell
Yaqiong Li
Joseph Seibert
Robert Thornton
Jon E. Gudmundsson
Josef Frisch
Ningfeng Zhu
Tomoki Terasaki
Zhilei Xu
Jack Lashner
Tanay Bhandarkar
James A. Beall
Michael J. Link
Shuay-Pwu Patty Ho
Eve M. Vavagiakis
Maximiliano Silva-Feaver
Michael R. Vissers
Gene C. Hilton
Marius Lungu
Jeff McMahon
Source :
The Astrophysical Journal. 922:38
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
American Astronomical Society, 2021.

Abstract

Advances in cosmic microwave background (CMB) science depend on increasing the number of sensitive detectors observing the sky. New instruments deploy large arrays of superconducting transition-edge sensor (TES) bolometers tiled densely into ever larger focal planes. High multiplexing factors reduce the thermal loading on the cryogenic receivers and simplify their design. We present the design of focal-plane modules with an order of magnitude higher multiplexing factor than has previously been achieved with TES bolometers. We focus on the novel cold readout component, which employs microwave SQUID multiplexing ($��$mux). Simons Observatory will use 49 modules containing 60,000 bolometers to make exquisitely sensitive measurements of the CMB. We validate the focal-plane module design, presenting measurements of the readout component with and without a prototype detector array of 1728 polarization-sensitive bolometers coupled to feedhorns. The readout component achieves a $95\%$ yield and a 910 multiplexing factor. The median white noise of each readout channel is 65 $\mathrm{pA/\sqrt{Hz}}$. This impacts the projected SO mapping speed by $< 8\%$, which is less than is assumed in the sensitivity projections. The results validate the full functionality of the module. We discuss the measured performance in the context of SO science requirements, which are exceeded.<br />Accepted to The Astrophysical Journal

Details

ISSN :
15384357 and 0004637X
Volume :
922
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
The Astrophysical Journal
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....39299c3dfefe94c35503f13874486724