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Elezov MS, Semenov AV, An PP, Tarkhov MA, Goltsman GN, Kardakova AI, et al. Investigating the detection regimes of a superconducting single-photon detector. J Opt Technol. 2013;80(7):435.
Abstract: The detection regimes of a superconducting single-photon detector have been investigated. A technique is proposed for determining the regions in which “pure regimes” predominate. Based on experimental data, the dependences of the internal quantum efficiency on the bias current are determined in the one-, two-, and three-photon detection regimes.
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Rasulova GK, Brunkov PN, Pentin IV, Kovalyuk VV, Gorshkov KN, Kazakov AY, et al. Mutual synchronization of two coupled self-oscillators based on GaAs/AlGaAs superlattices. Tech Phys. 2011;56(6):826–30.
Abstract: The interaction of self-oscillators based on 30-period weakly coupled GaAs/AlGaAs superlattices is studied. The action of one self-oscillator on the other was observed for a constant bias voltage in the absence of generation of self-sustained oscillations in one of the oscillators. It is shown that induced oscillations in a forced oscillator appear due to excitation of oscillations in the system of coupled oscillators forming the electric-field domain wall at the frequency of one of the higher harmonics of a forcing oscillation.
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Vorobyov VV, Kazakov AY, Soshenko VV, Korneev AA, Shalaginov MY, Bolshedvorskii SV, et al. Superconducting detector for visible and near-infrared quantum emitters [Invited]. Opt Mater Express. 2017;7(2):513–26.
Abstract: Further development of quantum emitter based communication and sensing applications intrinsically depends on the availability of robust single-photon detectors. Here, we demonstrate a new generation of superconducting single-photon detectors specifically optimized for the 500–1100 nm wavelength range, which overlaps with the emission spectrum of many interesting solid-state atom-like systems, such as nitrogen-vacancy and silicon-vacancy centers in diamond. The fabricated detectors have a wide dynamic range (up to 350 million counts per second), low dark count rate (down to 0.1 counts per second), excellent jitter (62 ps), and the possibility of on-chip integration with a quantum emitter. In addition to performance characterization, we tested the detectors in real experimental conditions involving nanodiamond nitrogen-vacancy emitters enhanced by a hyperbolic metamaterial.
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