Semenov A, Hübers H-W, Richter H, Birk M, Krocka M, Mair U, et al. Performance of terahertz heterodyne receiver with a superconducting hot-electron mixer. In: Proc. 13th Int. Symp. Space Terahertz Technol.; 2002. p. 229–34.
Abstract: During the past decade major advances have been made regarding low noise mixers for terahertz heterodyne receivers. State of the art hot-electron-bolometer (HEB) mixers have noise temperatures close to the quantum limit and require less than a microwatt power from the local oscillator (L0). The technology is now at a point where the performance of a practical receiver employing such mixer, rather than the figures of merit of the mixer itself, is of major concern. We have incorporated a phonon-cooled NbN HEB mixer in a 2.5 THz heterodyne receiver and investigated its performance. This yields important information for future development of heterodyne receivers such as GREAT (German receiver for astronomy at THz frequencies aboard SOFIA) [1] and TELIS (Terahertz limb sounder), a balloon borne heterodyne receiver for atmospheric research [2]. Both are currently under development at DLR.
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Uzawa Y, Miki S, Wang Z, Kawakami A, Kroug M, Yagoubov P, et al. Performance of a quasi-optical NbN hot-electron bolometric mixer at terahertz frequencies. Supercond Sci Technol. 2002;15(1):141–5.
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Smolyaninov II, Zayats AV, Stanishevsky A, Davis CC. Optical control of photon tunneling through an array of nanometer-scale cylindrical channels. Phys Rev B. 2002;66(20):205414_1–5.
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Maslennikov S, Antipov S, Shishkov A, Svechnikov S, Voronov B, Smirnov K, et al. NbN HEB mixer noise temperature measurements with hot/cold load mounted inside the helium cryostat at 300 GHz. In: Proc. Int. Student Seminar on Microwave Appl. of Novel Physical Phenomena supported by IEEE. St.-Petersburg: LETI; 2002.
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Deang J, Du Q, Gunzburger MD. Modeling and computation of random thermal fluctuations and material defects in the Ginzburg–Landau model for superconductivity. J. Comp. Phys.. 2002;181(1):45–67.
Abstract: It is well known that thermal fluctuations and material impurities affect the motion of vortices in superconductors. These effects are modeled by variants of a time-dependent Ginzburg-Landau model containing either additive or multiplicative noise. Numerical computations are presented that illustrate the effects that noise has on the dynamics of vortex nucleation and vortex motion. For an additive noise model with relatively low variances, it is found that the vortices form a quasi-steady-state lattice in which the vortex core sizes remain roughly fixed but their positions vibrate. Two multiplicative noise models are considered. For one model having relatively long-range order, the sizes of the vortex cores vary in time and from one vortex to another. Finally, for the additive noise case, we show that as the variance of the noise tends to zero, solutions of the stochastic time-dependent Ginzburg-Landau equations converge to solutions of the corresponding equations with no noise.
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