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First implementation of TES bolometer arrays with SQUID-based multiplexed readout on a balloon-borne platform

Authors :
Aubin, Francois
Aboobaker, Asad M.
Ade, Peter A. R.
Baccigalupi, Carlo
Bao, Chaoyun
Borrill, Julian
Cantalupo, Christopher
Chapman, Daniel
Didier, Joy
Dobbs, Matt
Grainger, William F.
Hanany, Shaul
Hubmayr, Johannes
Hyland, Peter
Hillbrand, Seth
Jaffe, Andrew
Johnson, Bradley
Jones, Terry
Kisner, Theodore
Klein, Jeff
Korotkov, Andrei
Leach, Sam
Lee, Adrian
Limon, Michele
MacDermid, Kevin
Matsumura, Tomotake
Meng, Xiaofan
Miller, Amber
Milligan, Michael
Polsgrove, Daniel
Ponthieu, Nicolas
Raach, Kate
Reichborn-Kjennerud, Britt
Sagiv, Ilan
Smecher, Graeme
Tran, Huan
Tucker, Gregory S.
Vinokurov, Yury
Yadav, Amit
Zaldarriaga, Matias
Zilic, Kyle
Aubin, Francois
Aboobaker, Asad M.
Ade, Peter A. R.
Baccigalupi, Carlo
Bao, Chaoyun
Borrill, Julian
Cantalupo, Christopher
Chapman, Daniel
Didier, Joy
Dobbs, Matt
Grainger, William F.
Hanany, Shaul
Hubmayr, Johannes
Hyland, Peter
Hillbrand, Seth
Jaffe, Andrew
Johnson, Bradley
Jones, Terry
Kisner, Theodore
Klein, Jeff
Korotkov, Andrei
Leach, Sam
Lee, Adrian
Limon, Michele
MacDermid, Kevin
Matsumura, Tomotake
Meng, Xiaofan
Miller, Amber
Milligan, Michael
Polsgrove, Daniel
Ponthieu, Nicolas
Raach, Kate
Reichborn-Kjennerud, Britt
Sagiv, Ilan
Smecher, Graeme
Tran, Huan
Tucker, Gregory S.
Vinokurov, Yury
Yadav, Amit
Zaldarriaga, Matias
Zilic, Kyle

Abstract

EBEX (the E and B EXperiment) is a balloon-borne telescope designed to measure the polarisation of the cosmic microwave background radiation. During a two week long duration science flight over Antarctica, EBEX will operate 768, 384 and 280 spider-web transition edge sensor (TES) bolometers at 150, 250 and 410 GHz, respectively. The 10-hour EBEX engineering flight in June 2009 over New Mexico and Arizona provided the first usage of both a large array of TES bolometers and a Superconducting QUantum Interference Device (SQUID) based multiplexed readout in a space-like environment. This successful demonstration increases the technology readiness level of these bolometers and the associated readout system for future space missions. A total of 82, 49 and 82 TES detectors were operated during the engineering flight at 150, 250 and 410 GHz. The sensors were read out with a new SQUID-based digital frequency domain multiplexed readout system that was designed to meet the low power consumption and robust autonomous operation requirements presented by a balloon experiment. Here we describe the system and the remote, automated tuning of the bolometers and SQUIDs. We compare results from tuning at float to ground, and discuss bolometer performance during flight

Details

Database :
OAIster
Notes :
10.1117/12.857596
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1257827829
Document Type :
Electronic Resource