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An Investigation of the Longitudinal Proximity Effect in Superconducting and Normal Metal TES
- Publication Year :
- 2010
- Publisher :
- United States: NASA Center for Aerospace Information (CASI), 2010.
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Abstract
- As the TES volume and (effective) Tc become very small - for volume < 10 micrometers x 10 micrometers x 0.5 micrometers and Tc < 90 mK - we approach a regime in which the noise equivalent power is dominated by fluctuations in power dissipating from the TES electrons to its phonons. Our ultimate goal is to build a TES bolometer that operates in this regime to be used for far-infrared and sub-mm astronomy. In this study, we characterize the R vs T behavior of small TES in order to engineer a TES bolometer that has a very low Tc. Sadleir et al found that as the distance L between two superconducting leads, with the lead Tc >> the TES Tc, connected at opposite ends of TES approaches zero, superconductivity is induced parallel to the current flow, or longitudinally, and results in a much higher effective TES Te. Here we present effective Te measurements of Mo/Au TES bounded by Nb leads as a function of L which ranges between 4 and 36 micrometer. We observe that the effective Te is suppressed for current density of order 10(exp -6) A/sq micrometers. We also explore the possibility of using a normal metal TES.
- Subjects :
- Electronics And Electrical Engineering
Subjects
Details
- Language :
- English
- Database :
- NASA Technical Reports
- Publication Type :
- Report
- Accession number :
- edsnas.20100031159
- Document Type :
- Report