Siemsen, K. J., Bernard, J. E., Madej, A. A., & Marmet, L. (2001). Absolute frequency measurement of a CO2/OsO4 stabilized laser at 28.8 THz. Appl. Phys. B: Lasers and Optics, 72, 567–573.
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Zhou, Y. D., Becker, C. R., Ashokan, R., Selamet, Y., Chang, Y., Boreiko, R. T., et al. (2002). Progress in far-infrared detection technology. In Proc. SPIE (Vol. 4795, pp. 121–128). Society of Photo-Optical Instrumentation Engineers (SPIE) Conference Series.
Abstract: II-VI intrinsic very long wavelength infrared (VLWIR, λc~20 to 50 μm) materials, HgCdTe alloys as well as HgCdTe/CdTe superlattices, were grown by molecular beam epitaxy (MBE). The layers were characterized by means of X-ray diffraction, conventional Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy, Hall effect measurements and transmittance electron microscopy (TEM). Photoconductor devices were processed and their spectral response was also measured to demonstrate their applicability in the VLWIR region.
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Verevkin, A. A., Zhang, J., Slysz, W., Sobolewski, R., Lipatov, A. P., Okunev, O., et al. (2002). Superconducting single-photon detectors for GHz-rate free-space quantum communications. In J. C. Ricklin, & D. G. Voelz (Eds.), Proc. SPIE (Vol. 4821, pp. 447–454). SPIE.
Abstract: We report our studies on the performance of new NbN ultrathin-film superconducting single-photon detectors (SSPDs). Our SSPDs exhibit experimentally measured quantum efficiencies from 5% at wavelength λ = 1550 nm up to 10% at λ = 405 nm, with exponential, activation-energy-type spectral sensitivity dependence in the 0.4-μm – 3-μm wavelength range. Using a variable optical delay setup, we have shown that our NbN SSPDs can resolve optical photons with a counting rate up to 10 GHz, presently limited by the read-out electronics. The measured device jitter was below 35 ps under optimum biasing conditions. The extremely high photon counting rate, together with relatively high (especially for λ > 1 μm) quantum efficiency, low jitter, and very low dark counts, make NbN SSPDs very promising for free-space communications and quantum cryptography.
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Semenov, A. D., Hübers, H. - W., Gol’tsman, G. N., & Smirnov, K. (2002). Superconducting quantum detector for astronomy and X-ray spectroscopy. In J. Pekola, B. Ruggiero, & P. Silvestrini (Eds.), Proc. Int. Workshop on Supercond. Nano-Electronics Devices (pp. 201–210). Boston, MA: Springer.
Abstract: We propose the novel concept of ultra-sensitive energy-dispersive superconducting quantum detectors prospective for applications in astronomy and X-ray spectroscopy. Depending on the superconducting material and operation conditions, such detector may allow realizing background limited noise equivalent power 10−21 W Hz−1/2 in the terahertz range when exposed to 4-K background radiation or counting of 6-keV photon with almost 10—4 energy resolution. Planar layout and relatively simple technology favor integration of elementary detectors into a detector array.
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Kostiuk, T. (2003). Heterodyne spectroscopy in the thermal infrared region: a window on physics and chemistry. In University of Maryland Inn and Conference Center (Ed.), Proc. International Thermal Detectors Workshop (TDW'03), session 7 (Heterodyne detectors). 3501 University Boulevar East Adelphi, MD 20783.
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