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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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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Rosfjord KM, Yang JKW, Dauler EA, Anant V, Berggren KK, Kerman AJ, et al. Increased detection efficiencies of nanowire single-photon detectors by integration of an optical cavity and anti-reflection coating. In: CLEO/QELS.; 2006. JTuF2 (1 to 2).
Abstract: We fabricate and test superconducting NbN-nanowire single-photon detectors with an integrated optical cavity and anti-reflection coating. We design the cavity and coating such as to maximize absorption in the NbN film of the detector.
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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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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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