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Tinkham M. Introduction to superconductivity. 2nd ed. USA; 1996.
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Zhizhon Y, Majedi HA. Optoelectronic mixing in the NbN superconducting nanowire single photon detectors. In: Proc. SPIE. Vol 3786.; 2009. 9.
Abstract: In this paper, we present our experimental results on the electrically pumped optoelectronic mixing effect exhibited in a niobium nitride (NbN) superconducting nanowire. The experimental setup in order to test the mixer has been reported in detail. This superconductive nanowire optoelectronic mixer demonstrates photodetection and mixing in an integrated manner. We have explored both effects under a great variety of external conditions, such as temperature and bias current, in order to seek potential ways toward quantum optoelectronic detection and mixing by such nanowire device.
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Семенов АВ, Девятов ИА, Третьяков ИВ, Лобанов ЮВ, Ожегов РВ, Петренко ДВ, et al. Вывод уравнения типа уравнения гинзбурга-ландау для нанопроволоки вблизи критического магнитного поля. Ж радиоэлектроники. 2011;11:4.
Abstract: Nonlinear Ginzburg-Landau equation for dirty supercondicting 1D wire is derived in the limit of high magnetic field.
В пределе больших магнитных полей выведено нелинейное уравнение Гинзбурга-Ландау, описывающее состояние одномерной «грязной» нанопроволоки.
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Тинкхам М. Введение в сверхпроводимость. Москва; 1980.
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Verevkin AA, Zhang J, Slysz W, Sobolewski R, Lipatov AP, Okunev O, et al. Superconducting single-photon detectors for GHz-rate free-space quantum communications. In: Ricklin JC, Voelz DG, editors. Proc. SPIE. Vol 4821. SPIE; 2002. p. 447–54.
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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