Amit Yadav
Aston University
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Featured researches published by Amit Yadav.
Physical Review Letters | 2014
Peter A. R. Ade; Y. Akiba; A. E. Anthony; K. Arnold; M. Atlas; D. Barron; D. Boettger; J. Borrill; Sydney Chapman; Y. Chinone; M. Dobbs; T. Elleflot; J. Errard; G. Fabbian; Chang Feng; D. Flanigan; A. Gilbert; William F. Grainger; N. W. Halverson; M. Hasegawa; K. Hattori; M. Hazumi; W. L. Holzapfel; Y. Hori; J. Howard; P. Hyland; Y. Inoue; G. Jaehnig; A. H. Jaffe; Brian Keating
Gravitational lensing due to the large-scale distribution of matter in the cosmos distorts the primordial cosmic microwave background (CMB) and thereby induces new, small-scale B-mode polarization. This signal carries detailed information about the distribution of all the gravitating matter between the observer and CMB last scattering surface. We report the first direct evidence for polarization lensing based on purely CMB information, from using the four-point correlations of even- and odd-parity E- and B-mode polarization mapped over ∼30 square degrees of the sky measured by the POLARBEAR experiment. These data were analyzed using a blind analysis framework and checked for spurious systematic contamination using null tests and simulations. Evidence for the signal of polarization lensing and lensing B modes is found at 4.2σ (stat+sys) significance. The amplitude of matter fluctuations is measured with a precision of 27%, and is found to be consistent with the Lambda cold dark matter cosmological model. This measurement demonstrates a new technique, capable of mapping all gravitating matter in the Universe, sensitive to the sum of neutrino masses, and essential for cleaning the lensing B-mode signal in searches for primordial gravitational waves.
Physical Review D | 2015
Peter A. R. Ade; K. Arnold; M. Atlas; C. Baccigalupi; D. Barron; D. Boettger; J. Borrill; S. C. Chapman; Y. Chinone; A. Cukierman; M. Dobbs; A. Ducout; Rolando Dünner; T. Elleflot; J. Errard; Giulio Fabbian; Stephen M. Feeney; Chang Feng; A. Gilbert; Neil Goeckner-Wald; John Groh; Grantland Hall; N. W. Halverson; M. Hasegawa; K. Hattori; M. Hazumi; Charles Hill; W. L. Holzapfel; Y. Hori; Logan Howe
Author(s): Ade, PAR; Arnold, K; Atlas, M; Baccigalupi, C; Barron, D; Boettger, D; Borrill, J; Chapman, S; Chinone, Y; Cukierman, A; Dobbs, M; Ducout, A; Dunner, R; Elleflot, T; Errard, J; Fabbian, G; Feeney, S; Feng, C; Gilbert, A; Goeckner-Wald, N; Groh, J; Hall, G; Halverson, NW; Hasegawa, M; Hattori, K; Hazumi, M; Hill, C; Holzapfel, WL; Hori, Y; Howe, L; Inoue, Y; Jaehnig, GC; Jaffe, AH; Jeong, O; Katayama, N; Kaufman, JP; Keating, B; Kermish, Z; Keskitalo, R; Kisner, T; Kusaka, A; Le Jeune, M; Lee, AT; Leitch, EM; Leon, D; Li, Y; Linder, E; Lowry, L; Matsuda, F; Matsumura, T; Miller, N; Montgomery, J; Myers, MJ; Navaroli, M; Nishino, H; Okamura, T; Paar, H; Peloton, J; Pogosian, L; Poletti, D; Puglisi, G; Raum, C; Rebeiz, G; Reichardt, CL; Richards, PL; Ross, C; Rotermund, KM; Schenck, DE; Sherwin, BD; Shimon, M; Shirley, I; Siritanasak, P; Smecher, G; Stebor, N; Steinbach, B; Suzuki, A; Suzuki, JI; Tajima, O; Takakura, S; Tikhomirov, A; Tomaru, T; Whitehorn, N; Wilson, B; Yadav, A; Zahn, A | Abstract:
IEEE Journal of Quantum Electronics | 2014
Ilya E. Titkov; S. Karpov; Amit Yadav; Vera L. Zerova; Modestas Zulonas; Bastian Galler; Martin Strassburg; Ines Pietzonka; Hans Lugauer; Edik U. Rafailov
Internal quantum efficiency (IQE) of a blue high-brightness InGaN/GaN light-emitting diode (LED) was evaluated from the external quantum efficiency measured as a function of current at various temperatures ranged between 13 and 440 K. Processing the data with a novel evaluation procedure based on the ABC-model, we have determined the temperature-dependent IQE of the LED structure and light extraction efficiency of the LED chip. Separate evaluation of these parameters is helpful for further optimization of the heterostructure and chip designs. The data obtained enable making a guess on the temperature dependence of the radiative and Auger recombination coefficients, which may be important for identification of dominant mechanisms responsible for the efficiency droop in III-nitride LEDs. Thermal degradation of the LED performance in terms of the emission efficiency is also considered.
Proceedings of SPIE | 2011
Jeff Klein; Asad M. Aboobaker; Peter A. R. Ade; François Aubin; C. Baccigalupi; Chaoyun Bao; J. Borrill; Daniel Chapman; Joy Didier; M. Dobbs; B. Gold; William F. Grainger; Shaul Hanany; J. Hubmayr; Seth Hillbrand; Julien Grain; A. H. Jaffe; B. R. Johnson; Terry Jay Jones; T. S. Kisner; Andrei Korotkov; Sam Leach; Adrian T. Lee; Lorne Levinson; M. Limon; Kevin MacDermid; Tomotake Matsumura; Amber D. Miller; Michael Milligan; Enzo Pascale
We present the design and measured performance of the superconducting magnetic bearing (SMB) that was used successfully as the rotation mechanism in the half-wave plate polarimeter of the E and B Experiment (EBEX) during its North American test flight. EBEX is a NASA-supported balloon-borne experiment that is designed to measure the polarization of the cosmic microwave background. In this implementation the half-wave plate is mounted to the rotor of an SMB that is operating at the sink temperature of 4 K. We demonstrate robust, remote operation on a balloon-borne payload, with angular encoding accuracy of 0.01°. We find rotational speed variation to be 0.2% RMS. We measure vibrational modes and find them to be consistent with a simple SMB model. We search for but do not find magnetic field interference in the detectors and readout. We set an upper limit of 3% of the receiver noise level after 5 minutes of integration on such interference. At 2 Hz rotation we measure a power dissipation of 56 mW. If this power dissipation is reduced, such an SMB implementation is a candidate for low-noise space applications because of the absence of stick-slip friction and low wear.
Proceedings of SPIE | 2010
François Aubin; Asad M. Aboobaker; Peter A. R. Ade; C. Baccigalupi; Chaoyun Bao; J. Borrill; C. M. Cantalupo; Daniel Chapman; Joy Didier; M. Dobbs; William F. Grainger; Shaul Hanany; J. Hubmayr; P. Hyland; Seth Hillbrand; A. H. Jaffe; B. R. Johnson; Terry Jay Jones; T. S. Kisner; Jeff Klein; Andrei Korotkov; Sam Leach; Adrian T. Lee; M. Limon; Kevin MacDermid; Tomotake Matsumura; X. Meng; Amber Miller; Michael Milligan; Daniel Polsgrove
EBEX (the E and B EXperiment) is a balloon-borne telescope designed to measure the polarisation of the cosmic microwave background radiation. During a two week long duration science flight over Antarctica, EBEX will operate 768, 384 and 280 spider-web transition edge sensor (TES) bolometers at 150, 250 and 410 GHz, respectively. The 10-hour EBEX engineering flight in June 2009 over New Mexico and Arizona provided the first usage of both a large array of TES bolometers and a Superconducting QUantum Interference Device (SQUID) based multiplexed readout in a space-like environment. This successful demonstration increases the technology readiness level of these bolometers and the associated readout system for future space missions. A total of 82, 49 and 82 TES detectors were operated during the engineering flight at 150, 250 and 410 GHz. The sensors were read out with a new SQUID-based digital frequency domain multiplexed readout system that was designed to meet the low power consumption and robust autonomous operation requirements presented by a balloon experiment. Here we describe the system and the remote, automated tuning of the bolometers and SQUIDs. We compare results from tuning at float to ground, and discuss bolometer performance during flight.
Proceedings of SPIE | 2010
Michael Milligan; Peter A. R. Ade; François Aubin; C. Baccigalupi; Chaoyun Bao; J. Borrill; C. M. Cantalupo; Daniel Chapman; Joy Didier; M. Dobbs; William F. Grainger; Shaul Hanany; Seth Hillbrand; J. Hubmayr; P. Hyland; A. H. Jaffe; B. R. Johnson; T. S. Kisner; Jeff Klein; Andrei Korotkov; Sam Leach; Adrian T. Lee; Lorne Levinson; M. Limon; Kevin MacDermid; Tomotake Matsumura; Amber Miller; Enzo Pascale; Daniel Polsgrove; N. Ponthieu
We present the hardware and software systems implementing autonomous operation, distributed real-time monitoring, and control for the EBEX instrument. EBEX is a NASA-funded balloon-borne microwave polarimeter designed for a 14 day Antarctic flight that circumnavigates the pole. To meet its science goals the EBEX instrument autonomously executes several tasks in parallel: it collects attitude data and maintains pointing control in order to adhere to an observing schedule; tunes and operates up to 1920 TES bolometers and 120 SQUID amplifiers controlled by as many as 30 embedded computers; coordinates and dispatches jobs across an onboard computer network to manage this detector readout system; logs over 3 GiB/hour of science and housekeeping data to an onboard disk storage array; responds to a variety of commands and exogenous events; and downlinks multiple heterogeneous data streams representing a selected subset of the total logged data. Most of the systems implementing these functions have been tested during a recent engineering flight of the payload, and have proven to meet the target requirements. The EBEX ground segment couples uplink and downlink hardware to a client-server software stack, enabling real-time monitoring and command responsibility to be distributed across the public internet or other standard computer networks. Using the emerging dirfile standard as a uniform intermediate data format, a variety of front end programs provide access to different components and views of the downlinked data products. This distributed architecture was demonstrated operating across multiple widely dispersed sites prior to and during the EBEX engineering flight.
Proceedings of SPIE | 2016
Amit Yadav; Ilya E. Titkov; G.S. Sokolovskii; S. Karpov; V.V. Dudelev; K.K. Soboleva; Martin Strassburg; Ines Pietzonka; Hans-Juergen Lugauer; Edik U. Rafailov
Efficiency of commercial 620 nm AlGaInP Golden Dragon-cased high-power LEDs has been studied under extremely high pump current density up to 4.5 kA/cm2 and pulse duration from microsecond down to sub-nanosecond range. To understand the nature of LED efficiency decrease with current, pulse width variation is used. Analysis of the pulse-duration dependence of the LED efficiency and emission spectrum suggests the active region overheating to be the major factor controlling the LED efficiency reduction at CW and sub-microsecond pumping. The overheating can be effectively avoided by the use of sub-nanosecond current pulses. A direct correlation between the onset of the efficiency decrease and LED overheating is demonstrated.
Gallium Nitride Materials and Devices XIII | 2018
Thomas J. Slight; Edik U. Rafailov; Amit Yadav; Anthony E. Kelly; Kevin E. Docherty; Piotr Perlin; M. Leszczynski; Stephen P. Najda; Szymon Grzanka; Szymon Stanczyk; Scott Watson
We have realised InGaN/GaN distributed feedback laser diodes emitting at a single wavelength in the 42X nm wavelength range. Laser diodes based on Gallium Nitride (GaN) are useful devices in a wide range of applications including atomic spectroscopy, data storage and optical communications. To fully exploit some of these application areas there is a need for a GaN laser diode with high spectral purity, e.g. in atomic clocks, where a narrow line width blue laser source can be used to target the atomic cooling transition. Previously, GaN DFB lasers have been realised using buried or surface gratings. Buried gratings require complex overgrowth steps which can introduce epi-defects. Surface gratings designs, can compromise the quality of the p-type contact due to dry etch damage and are prone to increased optical losses in the grating regions. In our approach the grating is etched into the sidewall of the ridge. Advantages include a simpler fabrication route and design freedom over the grating coupling strength.Our intended application for these devices is cooling of the Sr+ ion and for this objective the laser characteristics of SMSR, linewidth, and power are critical. We investigate how these characteristics are affected by adjusting laser design parameters such as grating coupling coefficient and cavity length.
Materials | 2017
Ilya E. Titkov; S. Karpov; Amit Yadav; Denis Mamedov; Vera L. Zerova; Edik U. Rafailov
External quantum efficiency of industrial-grade green InGaN light-emitting diodes (LEDs) has been measured in a wide range of operating currents at various temperatures from 13 K to 300 K. Unlike blue LEDs, the efficiency as a function of current is found to have a multi-peak character, which could not be fitted by a simple ABC-model. This observation correlated with splitting of LED emission spectra into two peaks at certain currents. The characterization data are interpreted in terms of non-uniformity of the LED active region, which is tentatively attributed to extended defects like V-pits. We suggest a new approach to evaluation of temperature-dependent light extraction and internal quantum efficiencies taking into account the active region non-uniformity. As a result, the temperature dependence of light extraction and internal quantum efficiencies have been evaluated in the temperature range mentioned above and compared with those of blue LEDs.
IEEE Photonics Technology Letters | 2017
Thomas J. Slight; Amit Yadav; Opeoluwa Odedina; Wyn Meredith; Kevin E. Docherty; Edik U. Rafailov; Anthony E. Kelly
We report on InGaN/GaN distributed feedback laser diodes with high order gratings emitting at a single wavelength around 428 nm. The 39th order notched gratings have the advantage of a simplified fabrication route with no need for overgrowth. The laser ridge and grating were formed by electron beam lithography followed by ICP etching. The as-cleaved lasers emitted in the pulsed regime with a peak single-mode output power of 15 mW. Optimization of the grating design should lead to higher power single wavelength operation.