B. K. Tan
University of Oxford
Network
Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.
Publication
Featured researches published by B. K. Tan.
IEEE Transactions on Terahertz Science and Technology | 2012
J. Leech; B. K. Tan; Ghassan Yassin; P. Kittara; S. Wangsuya
In previous work, we have described novel smooth-walled multiple flare-angle horns designed using a genetic algorithm. A key feature of these horns is that they can be manufactured very rapidly and cheaply in large numbers, by repeated direct drilling into a single plate of aluminum using a shaped machine tool. The rapid manufacturing technique will enable the construction of very low cost focal-plane arrays, offering an alternative to conventional electroformed corrugated horn arrays. In order to experimentally demonstrate the new technology, we constructed a 230 GHz focal-plane array comprising 37 smooth- walled horns fabricated by direct drilling. We present the measured beam patterns for a large sample of these horns across the array, demonstrating the suitability of our manufacturing techniques for large format arrays. We have measured the cross coupling between adjacent feeds and have shown that it is negligible. We also present high quality beam patterns measured for a much smaller 700 GHz horn, showing the promise of the extending this technology to THz frequencies.
The Astrophysical Journal | 2009
C. D. Wilson; B. E. Warren; F. P. Israel; S. Serjeant; G. J. Bendo; Elias Brinks; D. L. Clements; Stephane Courteau; Judith A. Irwin; J. H. Knapen; J. Leech; H. E. Matthews; S. Mühle; A. M. J. Mortier; G. Petitpas; E. Sinukoff; Kristine Spekkens; B. K. Tan; R. P. J. Tilanus; A. Usero; P. van der Werf; T. Wiegert; M. Zhu
We present large-area maps of the CO J = 3-2 emission obtained at the James Clerk Maxwell Telescope for four spiral galaxies in the Virgo Cluster. We combine these data with published CO J = 1-0, 24 μm, and Hα images to measure the CO line ratios, molecular gas masses, and instantaneous gas depletion times. For three galaxies in our sample (NGC 4254, NGC 4321, and NGC 4569), we obtain molecular gas masses of 7 × 108 – 3 × 109 M ☉ and disk-averaged instantaneous gas depletion times of 1.1-1.7 Gyr. We argue that the CO J = 3-2 line is a better tracer of the dense star-forming molecular gas than the CO J = 1-0 line, as it shows a better correlation with the star formation rate surface density both within and between galaxies. NGC 4254 appears to have a larger star formation efficiency (smaller gas depletion time), perhaps because it is on its first passage through the Virgo Cluster. NGC 4569 shows a large-scale gradient in the gas properties traced by the CO J = 3-2/J = 1-0 line ratio, which suggests that its interaction with the intracluster medium is affecting the dense star-forming portion of the interstellar medium directly. The fourth galaxy in our sample, NGC 4579, has weak CO J = 3-2 emission despite having bright 24 μm emission; however, much of the central luminosity in this galaxy may be due to the presence of a central active galactic nucleus.
Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society | 2010
G. J. Bendo; C. D. Wilson; B. E. Warren; Elias Brinks; Harold M. Butner; P. Chanial; D. L. Clements; Stephane Courteau; Judith A. Irwin; F. P. Israel; Johan H. Knapen; J. Leech; H. E. Matthews; S. Mühle; G. Petitpas; S. Serjeant; B. K. Tan; R. P. J. Tilanus; A. Usero; M. Vaccari; P. van der Werf; C. Vlahakis; T. Wiegert; M. Zhu
We used 3.6, 8.0, 70, 160 µm Spitzer Space Telescope data, James Clerk Maxwell Telescope HARP-B COJ =(3-2) data, National Radio Astronomy Observatory 12 meter telescope CO J =(1-0) data, and Very Large Array HI data to investigate the relations among PAHs, cold (� 20 K) dust, molecular gas, and atomic gas within NGC 2403, an SABcd galaxy at a distance of 3.13 Mpc. The dust surface density is mainly a function of the total (atomic and molecular) gas surface density and galactocentric radius. The gas-to-dust ratio monotonically increases with radius, varying from � 100 in the nucleus to � 400 at 5.5 kpc. The slope of the gas-to-dust ratio is close to that of the oxygen abunda nce, suggesting that metallicity strongly affects the gas-to-dust ratio within this galaxy. The exponential scale length of the radial profile for the CO J =(3-2) emission is statistically identical to the scale len gth for the stellar continuum-subtracted 8 µm (PAH 8 µm) emission. However, CO J =(3-2) and PAH 8 µm surface brightnesses appear uncorrelated when examining sub-kpc sized regions.
The Astrophysical Journal | 2010
B. E. Warren; C. D. Wilson; F. P. Israel; S. Serjeant; G. J. Bendo; Elias Brinks; D. L. Clements; Judith A. Irwin; J. H. Knapen; J. Leech; H. E. Matthews; S. Mühle; A. M. J. Mortimer; G. Petitpas; E. Sinukoff; Kristine Spekkens; B. K. Tan; R. P. J. Tilanus; A. Usero; P. van der Werf; C. Vlahakis; T. Wiegert; M. Zhu
Original article can be found at: http://iopscience.iop.org/0004-637X/ Copyright American Astronomical Society. [Full text of this article is not available in the UHRA]
Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society | 2010
C. D. Wilson; B. E. Warren; Judith A. Irwin; Johan H. Knapen; F. P. Israel; S. Serjeant; D. Attewell; G. J. Bendo; Elias Brinks; Harold M. Butner; D. L. Clements; J. Leech; H. E. Matthews; S. Mühle; A. M. J. Mortier; T. J. Parkin; G. Petitpas; B. K. Tan; R. P. J. Tilanus; A. Usero; M. Vaccari; P. van der Werf; T. Wiegert; M. Zhu
The definitive version can be found at: http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/ Copyright Wiley-Blackwell and Royal Astronomical Society
Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society | 2012
C. D. Wilson; B. E. Warren; F. P. Israel; S. Serjeant; D. Attewell; G. J. Bendo; Harold M. Butner; P. Chanial; D. L. Clements; J. Golding; Volker Heesen; Judith A. Irwin; J. Leech; Henry E. Matthews; S. Mühle; A. M. J. Mortier; G. Petitpas; J. R. Sánchez-Gallego; E. Sinukoff; K. Shorten; B. K. Tan; R. P. J. Tilanus; A. Usero; M. Vaccari; T. Wiegert; M. Zhu; D. M. Alexander; Paul Alexander; M. Azimlu; Pauline Barmby
The James Clerk Maxwell Telescope Nearby Galaxies Legacy Survey (NGLS) comprises an H i-selected sample of 155 galaxies spanning all morphological types with distances less than 25 Mpc. We describe the scientific goals of the survey, the sample selection and the observing strategy. We also present an atlas and analysis of the CO J=3 - 2 maps for the 47 galaxies in the NGLS which are also part of the Spitzer Infrared Nearby Galaxies Survey. We find a wide range of molecular gas mass fractions in the galaxies in this sample and explore the correlation of the far-infrared luminosity, which traces star formation, with the CO luminosity, which traces the molecular gas mass. By comparing the NGLS data with merging galaxies at low and high redshift, which have also been observed in the CO J=3 - 2 line, we show that the correlation of far-infrared and CO luminosity shows a significant trend with luminosity. This trend is consistent with a molecular gas depletion time which is more than an order of magnitude faster in the merger galaxies than in nearby normal galaxies. We also find a strong correlation of the LFIR/LCO(3-2) ratio with the atomic-to-molecular gas mass ratio. This correlation suggests that some of the far-infrared emission originates from dust associated with atomic gas and that its contribution is particularly important in galaxies where most of the gas is in the atomic phase.
Astronomy and Astrophysics | 2011
J. Leech; B. K. Tan; Ghassan Yassin; P. Kittara; S. Wangsuya; J. Treuttel; M. Henry; M. L. Oldfield; P. G. Huggard
Context. The use of large-format focal plane imaging arrays employing multiple feed horns is becoming increasingly important for the next generation of single dish sub-mm telescopes and cosmology experiments. Such receivers are being commissioned on both general purpose, common user telescopes and telescopes specifically designed for mapping intensity and polarisation anisotropies in the cosmic microwave background (CMB). Telescopes are currently being constructed to map the CMB polarisation that employ hundreds of feeds and the cost of manufacturing these feeds has become a significant fraction of the total cost of the telescope. Aims. We have developed and manufactured low-cost easy-to-machine smooth-walled horns that have a performance comparable to the more traditional corrugated feed horns that are often used in focal plane arrays. Our horns are much easier to fabricate than corrugated horns enabling the rapid construction of arrays with a large number of horns at a very low cost. Methods. Our smooth walled horns use multiple changes in flare angle to excite higher order waveguide modes. They are designed using a genetic algorithm to optimise the positions and magnitudes of these flare angle discontinuities. We have developed a fully parallelised software suite for the optimisation of these horns. We have manufactured prototype horns by traditional electroforming and also by a new direct drilling technique and we have measured their beam patterns using a far-field antenna test range at 230 GHz. Results. We present simulated and measured far-field beam patterns for one of our horn designs. They exhibit low sidelobe levels, good beam circularity and low cross-polarisation levels over a fractional bandwidth of 20%. These results offer experimental confirmation of our design technique, allowing us to proceed confidently in the optimisation of horns with a wider operational bandwidth. The results also show that the new manufacturing technique using drilling is successful, enabling the fabrication of large format arrays by repeatedly drilling into a single aluminium plate. This will enable the construction of focal plane arrays at a very low cost per horn. Conclusions. We have developed a new type of high performance feed horn that is fast and easy to fabricate. Having demonstrated the efficacy of our horn designs experimentally, we are building and testing a prototype focal plane array of 37 hexagonally close packed horns. This prototype array will be an important step towards building a complete CMB mapping receiver using these feed horns.
IEEE Transactions on Terahertz Science and Technology | 2013
B. K. Tan; Ghassan Yassin; Paul K. Grimes; Karl Jacobs; Stafford Withington
We present the design and preliminary experimental results of a broadband 650 GHz balanced SIS mixer utilizing two back-to-back unilateral finline tapers. The new design employs fully integrated circuit components onto a 15 μm silicon-on-insulator (SOI) substrate, hence greatly simplifying the balanced mixer block requirements. Independent testing of the on-chip RF quadrature hybrid and the DC/IF blocks showed performances consistence with the computational predictions. The fabricated mixer chip tests have also demonstrated successful operation in balanced mixing mode as the LO noise was separated from the IF output. Preliminary tests of the devices sensitivity gave a best double sideband (DSB) noise temperature of 714 K measured at 635 GHz, and remained at a similar level throughout the operating frequency band. The higher than expected noise temperature was mainly caused by a significant shift in the junction position during fabrication, in both the longitudinal and lateral directions, resulting in substantial shift in the tuning frequency and degradation in the coupling of power to the junction.
IEEE Transactions on Terahertz Science and Technology | 2012
B. K. Tan; Ghassan Yassin; Paul K. Grimes; J. Leech; Karl Jacobs; Christopher Groppi
We report the design and successful operation of an superconductor-insulator-superconductor (SIS) mixer operating near the superconducting gap of niobium. A key feature of this design is the employment of a unilateral finline taper to transform the waveguide modes to microstrip signals. This transition is easy to design since it can be rigorously modeled, and also easy to fabricate being a single-layer structure. We will show that unilateral finline mixers have important advantages at THz frequencies since they exhibit wideband operation at both radio frequency (RF) and intermediate frequency (IF), allow elegant on-chip integration of the mixer circuits and result in an extremely simple mixer block that does not require a backshort or any mechanical tuners. The mixer we describe below is fed by a multiple flare-angle smooth-walled horn which exhibits beam pattern characteristic comparable to the conventional corrugated horn and yet is much easier to fabricate. In this paper, we shall present a brief discussion of the testing of the multiple flare-angle horn and detailed description of the design and testing of the mixer, covering ~100 GHz bandwidth centered at 650 GHz. In particular, we will present full electromagnetic de sign description of the mixer chip including the superconducting effects, and the heterodyne properties of the mixer using quantum mixing theory. Mixer performance tests that we carried out from 595 to 702 GHz gave a best receiver noise temperature of 145 K at 600 GHz, corrected for a 75 μm beam splitter. Finally, we performed a thorough analysis of the mixer performance, comparing the experimental results with theoretical models. Our investigation demonstrated that unilateral finline mixers fed by a multiple flare-angle horn can yield performance comparable to conventional designs, hence are suitable for large format mixer array at THz frequencies.
Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society | 2013
B. K. Tan; J. Leech; D. Rigopoulou; B. E. Warren; C. D. Wilson; D. Attewell; M. Azimlu; G. J. Bendo; Harold M. Butner; Elias Brinks; P. Chanial; D. L. Clements; Volker Heesen; F. P. Israel; Johan H. Knapen; H. E. Matthews; A. M. J. Mortier; S. Mühle; José R. Sánchez-Gallego; R. P. J. Tilanus; A. Usero; P. van der Werf; M. Zhu
We present 12 CO J=3!2 maps of NGC 2976 and NGC 3351 obtained with the James Clerk Maxwell Telescope (JCMT), both early targets of the JCMT Nearby Galaxy Legacy Survey (NGLS). We combine the present observations with 12 CO J=1!0 data and nd that the computed 12 CO J=3!2 to 12 CO J=1!0 line