D. Flanigan
Columbia University
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Publication
Featured researches published by D. Flanigan.
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.
Review of Scientific Instruments | 2014
Heather McCarrick; D. Flanigan; Glenn Jones; B. R. Johnson; Peter A. R. Ade; Derek Araujo; Kristi J. Bradford; Robin Cantor; George Che; Peter K. Day; S. Doyle; H. G. LeDuc; M. Limon; Vy Luu; P. Mauskopf; Amber D. Miller; Tony Mroczkowski; C. Tucker; Jonas Zmuidzinas
We discuss the design, fabrication, and testing of prototype horn-coupled, lumped-element kinetic inductance detectors (LEKIDs) designed for cosmic microwave background studies. The LEKIDs are made from a thin aluminum film deposited on a silicon wafer and patterned using standard photolithographic techniques at STAR Cryoelectronics, a commercial device foundry. We fabricated 20-element arrays, optimized for a spectral band centered on 150 GHz, to test the sensitivity and yield of the devices as well as the multiplexing scheme. We characterized the detectors in two configurations. First, the detectors were tested in a dark environment with the horn apertures covered, and second, the horn apertures were pointed towards a beam-filling cryogenic blackbody load. These tests show that the multiplexing scheme is robust and scalable, the yield across multiple LEKID arrays is 91%, and the measured noise-equivalent temperatures for a 4 K optical load are in the range 26±6 μK√s.
Applied Physics Letters | 2016
D. Flanigan; Heather McCarrick; Glenn Jones; B. R. Johnson; Maximilian H. Abitbol; Peter A. R. Ade; Derek Araujo; Kristi J. Bradford; Robin Cantor; George Che; P. K. Day; S. Doyle; C. B. Kjellstrand; H. G. LeDuc; M. Limon; Vy Luu; Philip Daniel Mauskopf; Amber D. Miller; Tony Mroczkowski; Carole Tucker; Jonas Zmuidzinas
We report photon-noise limited performance of horn-coupled, aluminum lumped-element kinetic inductance detectors at millimeter wavelengths. The detectors are illuminated by a millimeter-wave source that uses an active multiplier chain to produce radiation between 140 and 160 GHz. We feed the multiplier with either amplified broadband noise or a continuous-wave tone from a microwave signal generator. We demonstrate that the detector response over a 40 dB range of source power is well-described by a simple model that considers the number of quasiparticles. The detector noise-equivalent power (NEP) is dominated by photon noise when the absorbed power is greater than approximately 1 pW, which corresponds to
Proceedings of SPIE | 2016
B. R. Johnson; D. Flanigan; Maximilian H. Abitbol; Peter A. R. Ade; Sean Bryan; H. M. Cho; Rahul Datta; Peter K. Day; S. Doyle; K. D. Irwin; Glenn Jones; Sarah S. Kernasovskiy; D. Li; Philip Daniel Mauskopf; Heather McCarrick; Jeff McMahon; Amber Miller; Giampaolo Pisano; Yanru Song; Harshad Surdi; Carole Tucker
\mathrm{NEP} \approx 2 \times 10^{-17} \, \mathrm{W} \, \mathrm{Hz}^{-1/2}
Proceedings of SPIE | 2014
Derek Araujo; Peter A. R. Ade; J. R. Bond; Kristi J. Bradford; Daniel Chapman; George Che; Peter K. Day; Joy Didier; S. Doyle; H. K. Eriksen; D. Flanigan; Christopher Groppi; Seth Hillbrand; B. R. Johnson; Glenn Jones; M. Limon; Amber Miller; P. Mauskopf; Heather McCarrick; Tony Mroczkowski; Britt Reichborn-Kjennerud; Brian Smiley; Joshua Sobrin; I. K. Wehus; Jonas Zmuidzinas
, referenced to absorbed power. At higher source power levels we observe the relationships between noise and power expected from the photon statistics of the source signal:
Applied Physics Letters | 2016
D. Flanigan; B. R. Johnson; Maximilian H. Abitbol; Sean Bryan; Robin Cantor; P. K. Day; Glenn Jones; Philip Daniel Mauskopf; Heather McCarrick; Amber Miller; Jonas Zmuidzinas
\mathrm{NEP} \propto P
Astronomy and Astrophysics | 2018
Heather McCarrick; Glenn Jones; B. R. Johnson; Maximilian H. Abitbol; Peter A. R. Ade; Sean Bryan; P. K. Day; Thomas Essinger-Hileman; D. Flanigan; H. G. LeDuc; M. Limon; Philip Daniel Mauskopf; Amber Miller; Carole Tucker
for broadband (chaotic) illumination and
Applied Physics Letters | 2017
Glenn Jones; B. R. Johnson; Maximilian H. Abitbol; Peter A. R. Ade; Sean Bryan; H. M. Cho; P. K. Day; D. Flanigan; K. D. Irwin; D. Li; Philip Daniel Mauskopf; Heather McCarrick; Amber Miller; Y. Song; Carole Tucker
\mathrm{NEP} \propto P^{1/2}
Proceedings of SPIE | 2016
Heather McCarrick; Maximilian H. Abitbol; Peter A. R. Ade; P. S. Barry; Sean Bryan; George Che; Peter K. Day; S. Doyle; D. Flanigan; B. R. Johnson; Glenn Jones; H. G. LeDuc; M. Limon; Philip Daniel Mauskopf; Amber Miller; Carole Tucker; Jonas Zmuidzinas
for continuous-wave (coherent) illumination.
Journal of Low Temperature Physics | 2016
Sean Bryan; James E. Aguirre; George Che; S. Doyle; D. Flanigan; Christopher Groppi; B. R. Johnson; Glenn Jones; Philip Daniel Mauskopf; Heather McCarrick; Alessandro Monfardini; Tony Mroczkowski
We report on the development of scalable prototype microwave kinetic inductance detector (MKID) arrays tai- lored for future multi-kilo-pixel experiments that are designed to simultaneously characterize the polarization properties of both the cosmic microwave background (CMB) and Galactic dust emission. These modular arrays are composed of horn-coupled, polarization-sensitive MKIDs, and each pixel has four detectors: two polariza- tions in two spectral bands between 125 and 280 GHz. A horn is used to feed each array element, and a planar orthomode transducer, composed of two waveguide probe pairs, separates the incoming light into two linear po- larizations. Diplexers composed of resonant-stub band-pass filters separate the radiation into 125 to 170 GHz and 190 to 280 GHz pass bands. The millimeter-wave power is ultimately coupled to a hybrid co-planar waveguide microwave kinetic inductance detector using a novel, broadband circuit developed by our collaboration. Elec- tromagnetic simulations show the expected absorption efficiency of the detector is approximately 90%. Array fabrication will begin in the summer of 2016.