|
Chen PS. Infrared properties of barium stars. A&A. 2001;372(1):245–8.
|
|
|
Hsiao FZ, Lin MC, Wang C, Lee DS, Chen JR, Hilbert B, et al. The liquid helium cryogenic system for the superconducting cavity in SRRC. In: Proc. Particle Accelerator Conference. Vol 2.; 2001. p. 1604–6.
Abstract: A 500 MHz superconducting cavity will replace the current copper cavity and begin to operate in the beginning of the year 2003. A liquid helium cryogenic system provides the cavity at 4.5 K a cooling capacity of 255 W without LN2 pre-cooling and a liquefaction rate of 110 liter/hour with LN2 pre-cooling. A safety factor of 1.5 is used to estimate the heat load from the superconducting cavity and the heat loss from the transfer lines. With the LN2 pre-cooling, this cooling system provides a cooling capacity of up to 450 W to cool down the additional superconducting Landau cavity. The capacity of the system can be tuned using a frequency driver installed at the compressor station. The pressure fluctuations of the dewar and of the suction line are kept to the same stability requirement that of the cavity cryostat to minimize the influence in cavity operation. A shutdown period for maintenance of more than 8000 hours for the cryogenic system is expected without interfering with the continuous operation of the superconducting cavity.
|
|
|
Ganzevles WFM, Gao JR, de Korte PAJ, Klapwijk TM. Direct response of microstrip line coupled Nb THz hot-electron bolometer mixers. Appl Phys Lett. 2001;79(15):2483–5.
|
|
|
Kroug M. Hot electron bolometric mixers for a quasi-optical terahertz receiver [Ph.D. thesis]. Chalmers University of Technology, Gothenburg, Sweden; 2001.
|
|
|
Van Rudd J, Johnson JL, Mittleman DM. Cross-polarized angular emission patterns from lens-coupled terahertz antennas. J. Opt. Soc. Am. B. 2001;18(10):1524.
|
|
|
Kroug M, Cherednichenko S, Merkel H, Kollberg E, Voronov B, Gol'tsman G, et al. NbN hot electron bolometric mixers for terahertz receivers. IEEE Trans Appl Supercond. 2001;11(1):962–5.
Abstract: Sensitivity and gain bandwidth measurements of phonon-cooled NbN superconducting hot-electron bolometer mixers are presented. The best receiver noise temperatures are: 700 K at 1.6 THz and 1100 K at 2.5 THz. Parylene as an antireflection coating on silicon has been investigated and used in the optics of the receiver. The dependence of the mixer gain bandwidth (GBW) on the bias voltage has been measured. Starting from low bias voltages, close to operating conditions yielding the lowest noise temperature, the GBW increases towards higher bias voltages, up to three times the initial value. The highest measured GBW is 9 GHz within the same bias range the noise temperature increases by a factor of two.
|
|
|
Shitov SV, Levitchev M, Veretennikov AV, Koshelets VP, Prokopenko GV, Filippenko LV, et al. Superconducting integrated receiver as 400-600 GHz tester for coolable devices. IEEE Trans. Appl. Supercond.. 2001;11(1):832–5.
|
|
|
Gershenson ME, Gong D, Sato T, Karasik BS, Sergeev AV. Millisecond electron-phonon relaxation in ultrathin disordered metal films at millikelvin temperatures. Appl. Phys. Lett.. 2001;79:2049–51.
|
|
|
Jackson BD, Baryshev AM, de Lange G, Gao JR, Shitov SV, Iosad NN, et al. Low-noise 1 THz superconductor-insulator-superconductor mixer incorporating a NbTiN/SiO2/Al tuning circuit. Appl. Phys. Lett.. 2001;79(3):436.
|
|
|
Karpov A, Miller D, Rice F, Zmuidzinas J, Stern JA, Bumble B, et al. Low noise 1.2 THz SIS receiver. In: Jet Propulsion Laboratory CIit.u.t.e of T, editor. Proc. 12th Int. Symp. Space Terahertz Technol. San Diego, CA, USA; 2001. p. 21–2.
|
|