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Chulkova, G., Milostnaya, I., Tarkhov, M., Korneev, A., Minaeva, O., Voronov, B., et al. (2006). Superconducting single-photon nanostructured detectors for advanced optical applications. In Proc. Symposium on Photonics Technologies for 7th Framework Program (Vol. 400).
Abstract: We present superconducting single-photon detectors (SSPDs) based on NbN thin-film nanostructures and operated at liquid helium temperatures. The SSPDs are made of ultrathin NbN films (2.5-4 nm thick, Tc= 9-11K) as meander-shaped nanowires covering the area of 10× 10 µm2. Our detectors are operated at the temperature well below the critical temperature Tc and are DC biased by a current Ib close to the meander critical current Ic. The operation principle of the detector is based on the use of the resistive region in a narrow ultra-thin superconducting stripe upon the absorption of an incident photon. The developed devices demonstrate high sensitivity and response speed in a broadband range from UV to mid-IR (up to 6 µm), making them very attractive for advanced optical technologies, which require efficient detectors of single quanta and low-density optical radiation.
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Koshelets, V. P., Ermakov, A. B., Filippenko, L. V., Koryukin, O. V., Khudchenko, A. V., Sobolev, A. S., et al. (2006). Superconducting submm integrated receiver for TELIS. In J. Phys.: Conf. Ser. (Vol. 43, pp. 1377–1380).
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de Graauw, T., Whyborn, N., Caux, E., Phillips, T., Stutzki, J., Tielens, X., et al. (2006). The Herschel-heterodyne instrument for the far-infrared (HIFI). In Proc. SPIE. Orlando.
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McDonald, P. C., Jaramillo, E., & Baudouy, B. (2006). Thermal design of the CFRP support struts for the spatial framework of the Herschel Space Observatory. Cryogenics, 46(4), 298–304.
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Irwin, K. D. (2006). Thermodynamics of nonlinear bolometers near equilibrium. In Proc. 11th International Workshop on Low Temp. Detectors (Vol. 559, pp. 718–720).
Abstract: We present the first thermodynamically correct calculation of the noise in a simple nonlinear resistive bolometer or calorimeter operated out of equilibrium. The solution is rigorous only for first- and second-order deviations from equilibrium, and for the linear and quadratic terms of dissipative elements. In contrast, existing models of noise in resistive bolometers are based on the application of equilibrium theories to a system that is often nonlinear and out of equilibrium. We derive solutions applicable both in and out of steady state. The noise has power spectral density different from the equilibrium theory, and it has higher-order correlations and non-Gaussian characteristics. The results do not apply to non-Markovian hidden variables in the bolometer.
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