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Verevkin A, Slysz W, Pearlman A, Zhang J, Sobolewski R, Okunev O, et al. Real-time GHz-rate counting of infrared photons using nanostructured NbN superconducting detectors. In: CLEO/QELS. Optical Society of America; 2003. CThM8.
Abstract: We demonstrate that our ultrathin, nanometer-width NbN superconducting single-photon detectors are capable of above 1-GHz-frequency, real-time counting of near-infrared photons. The measured system jitter of the detector is below 15 ps.
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Verevkin A, Williams C, Gol’tsman GN, Sobolewski R, Gilbert G. Single-photon superconducting detectors for practical high-speed quantum cryptography. Optical Society of America; 2001.
Abstract: We have developed an ultrafast superconducting single-photon detector with negligible dark counting rate. The detector is based on an ultrathin, submicron-wide NbN meander-type stripe and can detect individual photons in the visible to near-infrared wavelength range at a rate of at least 10 Gb/s. The above counting rate allows us to implement the NbN device to unconditionally secret quantum key distRochester, New Yorkribution in a practical, high-speed system using real-time Vernam enciphering.
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Marsili F, Bitauld D, Divochiy A, Gaggero A, Leoni R, Mattioli F, et al. Superconducting nanowire photon number resolving detector at telecom wavelength. In: CLEO/QELS. Optical Society of America; 2008. Qmj1 (1 to 2).
Abstract: We demonstrate a photon-number-resolving (PNR) detector, based on parallel superconducting nanowires, capable of resolving up to 5 photons in the telecommunication wavelength range, with sensitivity and speed far exceeding existing approaches.
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Minaeva O, Fraine A, Korneev A, Divochiy A, Goltsman G, Sergienko A. High resolution optical time-domain reflectometry using superconducting single-photon detectors. In: Frontiers in Opt. 2012/Laser Sci. XXVIII. Optical Society of America; 2012. Fw3a.39.
Abstract: We discuss the advantages and limitations of single-photon optical time-domain reflectometry with superconducting single-photon detectors. The higher two-point resolution can be achieved due to superior timing performance of SSPDs in comparison with InGaAs APDs.
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Zinoni C, Alloing B, Li LH, Marsili F, Fiore A, Lunghi L, et al. Single-photonics at telecom wavelengths using nanowire superconducting single photon detectors. In: CLEO/QELS. Optical Society of America; 2007. QTuF6 (1 to 2).
Abstract: Novel single-photon detectors based on NbN superconducting nanostructures promise orders-of- magnitude improvement over InGaAs APDs. We demonstrate this improved performance for the first time by measuring the g(2)(τ) on single photon states produced by a quantum dot at telecom wavelength.
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Dauler EA, Kerman AJ, Robinson BS, Yang JKW, Voronov BM, Gol’tsman GN, et al. Achieving high counting rates in superconducting nanowire single-photon detectors. In: CLEO/QELS. Optical Society of America; 2006. JTuD3 (1 to 2).
Abstract: Kinetic inductance is determined to be the primary limitation to the counting rate of superconducting nanowire single-photon counters. Approaches for overcoming this limitation will be discussed.
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Sobolewski R, Verevkin A, Gol’tsman GN. Superconducting optical single-photon detectors. In: CLEO/QELS. Optical Society of America; 2004. IThD1.
Abstract: We review the development of superconducting single-photon detectors. The devices are characterized by experimental quantum efficiency of ~8% for infrared photons, counting rate ~2 GHz, 18 ps jitter, and <0.01 per second dark counts.
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Zhang J, Pearlman A, Slysz W, Verevkin A, Sobolewski R, Okunev O, et al. Infrared picosecond superconducting single-photon detectors for CMOS circuit testing. In: CLEO/QELS. Optical Society of America; 2003. Cmv4.
Abstract: Novel, NbN superconducting single-photon detectors have been developed for ultrafast, high quantum efficiency detection of single quanta of infrared radiation. Our devices have been successfully implemented in a commercial VLSI CMOS circuit testing system.
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Rath P, Vetter A, Kovalyuk V, Ferrari S, Kahl O, Nebel C, et al. Travelling-wave single-photon detectors integrated with diamond photonic circuits: operation at visible and telecom wavelengths with a timing jitter down to 23 ps. In: Broquin J-E, Conti GN, editors. Integrated Optics: Devices, Mat. Technol. XX. Vol 9750. Spie; 2016. p. 135–42.
Abstract: We report on the design, fabrication and measurement of travelling-wave superconducting nanowire single-photon detectors (SNSPDs) integrated with polycrystalline diamond photonic circuits. We analyze their performance both in the near-infrared wavelength regime around 1600 nm and at 765 nm. Near-IR detection is important for compatibility with the telecommunication infrastructure, while operation in the visible wavelength range is relevant for compatibility with the emission line of silicon vacancy centers in diamond which can be used as efficient single-photon sources. Our detectors feature high critical currents (up to 31 μA) and high performance in terms of efficiency (up to 74% at 765 nm), noise-equivalent power (down to 4.4×10-19 W/Hz1/2 at 765 nm) and timing jitter (down to 23 ps).
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Korneev A, Divochiy A, Marsili F, Bitauld D, Fiore A, Seleznev V, et al. Superconducting photon number resolving counter for near infrared applications. In: Tománek P, Senderáková D, Hrabovský M, editors. Proc. SPIE. Vol 7138. Spie; 2008. 713828 (1 to 5).
Abstract: We present a novel concept of photon number resolving detector based on 120-nm-wide superconducting stripes made of 4-nm-thick NbN film and connected in parallel (PNR-SSPD). The detector consisting of 5 strips demonstrate a capability to resolve up to 4 photons absorbed simultaneously with the single-photon quantum efficiency of 2.5% and negligibly low dark count rate.
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