Hien T. Nguyen
Jet Propulsion Laboratory
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Featured researches published by Hien T. Nguyen.
Proceedings of SPIE | 2004
C. Matt Bradford; Peter A. R. Ade; James E. Aguirre; James J. Bock; Mark Dragovan; L. Duband; L. Earle; J. Glenn; Hideo Matsuhara; B. J. Naylor; Hien T. Nguyen; Minhee Yun; Jonas Zmuidzinas
We present the design, integration, and first ryogenic testing of our new broad-band millimeter-wave spectrometer, Z-Spec. Z-Spec uses a novel architecture called WaFIRS (Waveguide Far-IR Spectrometer), which employs a curved diffraction grating in a parallel-plate waveguide propagation medium. The instrument will provide a resolving power betwee 200 and 350 across an instantaneous bandwidth of 190-310 GHz, all packaged within a cryostat that is of order 1 meter in size. For background-limited astronomical observations in the 1mm terrestrial window, Z-Spec uses 160 silicon nitride micro-mesh bolometers and the detectors and waveguide grating are cooled to ~0.1 K. Our first cryogenic measurements at 225 GHz show resolving power greater than 200, and the end-to-end throughput is estimated to be greater than 30%, possibly as high as 40%. Z-Spec represents the first systematic approach to cosmological redshift measurement that is not based on optical or near-IR identifications. With its good sensitivity and large bandwidth, Z-Spec provides a new capability for millimeter-wave astrophysics. The instrument will be capable of measureing rotational carbon monoxide line emission from bright dusty galaxies at redshifts of up to 4, and the broad bandwidth insures that at least two lines will be simultaneously detected, providing an unambiguous redshift determination. In addition to Z-Specs observations over the next 1-3 years, the WaFIRS spectrometer architecture makes an excellent candidate for mid-IR to millimeter-wave spectrometers on future space-borned and suborbital platforms such as SPICA and SAFIR. The concept is dramatically more compact and lightweight than conventional free-space grating spectrometers, and no mirrors or lenses are used in the instrument. After the progress report on Z-Spec we highlight this capability.
Astronomical Telescopes and Instrumentation | 2003
J. Glenn; Peter A. R. Ade; Mihail Amarie; James J. Bock; S. F. Edgington; A. Goldin; S. R. Golwala; D. Haig; A. E. Lange; G. T. Laurent; Philip Daniel Mauskopf; Minhee Yun; Hien T. Nguyen
We describe the design and performance of Bolocam, a 144-element, bolometric, millimeter-wave camera. Bolocam is currently in its commissioning stage at the Caltech Submillimeter Observatory. We compare the instrument performance measured at the telescope with a detailed sensitivity model, discuss the factors limiting the current sensitivity, and describe our plans for future improvements intended to increase the mapping speed.
Astronomical Telescopes and Instrumentation | 2003
Brian Keating; Peter A. R. Ade; James J. Bock; E. Hivon; W. L. Holzapfel; A. E. Lange; Hien T. Nguyen; K. W. Yoon
We describe the design and expected performance of BICEP, a millimeter wave receiver designed to measure the polarization of the cosmic microwave background. BICEP uses an array of polarization sensitive bolometers operating at 100 and 150 GHz to measure polarized signals over a 20 degree field of view with 1 degree resolution. BICEP is designed with particular attention to systematic effects which can potentially degrade the polarimetric fidelity of the observations. BICEP is optimized to detect the faint signature of a primordial gravitational wave background which is a generic prediction of inflationary cosmologies.
Astronomical Telescopes and Instrumentation | 2003
Charles M. Bradford; B. J. Naylor; Jonas Zmuidzinas; James J. Bock; J. J. Gromke; Hien T. Nguyen; Mark Dragovan; Minhee Yun; L. Earle; J. Glenn; Hideo Matsuhara; Peter A. R. Ade; L. Duband
The discovery of galaxies beyond z~1 which emit the bulk of their luminosity at long wavelengths has demonstrated the need for high-sensitivity, broad-band spectroscopy in the far-IR/submm/mm bands. Because many of these sources are not detectable in the optical, long-wavelength spectroscopy is key to measuring their redshifts and ISM conditions. The continuum source list will increase in the coming decade with new ground-based instruments (SCUBA2, Bolocam, MAMBO), and the surveys of HSO and SIRTF. Yet the planned spectroscopic capabilities lag behind, in part due to the difficulty in scaling existing IR spectrograph designs to longer wavelengths. To overcome these limitations, we are developing WaFIRS, a novel concept for long-wavelength spectroscopy which utilizes a parallel-plate waveguide and a curved diffraction grating. WaFIRS provides the large (~60%) instantaneous bandwidth and high throughput of a conventional grating system, but offers a dramatic reduction in volume and mass. WaFIRS requires no space overheads for extra optical elements beyond the diffraction grating itself, and is two-dimensional because the propagation is confined between two parallel plates. Thus several modules could be stacked to multiplex either spatially or in different frequency bands. The size and mass savings provide opportunities for spectroscopy from space-borne observatories which would be impractical with traditional spectrographs. With background-limited detectors and a cooled 3.5 m telescope, the line sensitivity would be comparable to that of ALMA, with instantaneous broad-band coverage. We present the spectrometer concept, performance verification with a mm-wave prototype, and our progress toward a cryogenic astronomical instrument
Proceedings of SPIE | 2010
Ran Duan; Sean McHugh; B. Serfass; Benjamin A. Mazin; Andrew Merrill; S. R. Golwala; Thomas P. Downes; Nicole G. Czakon; Peter K. Day; Jiansong Gao; J. Glenn; Matthew I. Hollister; H. G. LeDuc; Philip R. Maloney; Hien T. Nguyen; Jack Sayers; James A. Schlaerth; Seth Siegel; John E. Vaillancourt; Anastasios Vayonakis; Philip R. Wilson; Jonas Zmuidzinas
This paper will present the design, implementation, performance analysis of an open source readout system for arrays of microwave kinetic inductance detectors (MKID) for mm/submm astronomy. The readout system will perform frequency domain multiplexed real-time complex microwave transmission measurements in order to monitor the instantaneous resonance frequency and dissipation of superconducting microresonators. Each readout unit will be able to cover up to 550 MHz bandwidth and readout 256 complex frequency channels simultaneously. The digital electronics include the customized DAC, ADC, IF system and the FPGA based signal processing hardware developed by CASPER group.1-7 The entire system is open sourced, and can be customized to meet challenging requirement in many applications: e.g. MKID, MSQUID etc.
Proceedings of SPIE | 2010
Philip R. Maloney; Nicole G. Czakon; Peter K. Day; Thomas P. Downes; Ran Duan; Jiansong Gao; J. Glenn; S. R. Golwala; Matt I. Hollister; H. G. LeDuc; Benjamin A. Mazin; Sean McHugh; Hien T. Nguyen; Jack Sayers; James A. Schlaerth; Seth Siegel; John E. Vaillancourt; Anastasios Vayonakis; Philip R. Wilson; Jonas Zmuidzinas
MUSIC (the Multiwavelength Submillimeter kinetic Inductance Camera) is an instrument being developed for the Caltech Submillimeter Observatory by Caltech, JPL, the University of Colorado, and UCSB. MUSIC uses microwave kinetic inductance detectors (MKIDs) - superconducting micro-resonators - as photon detectors. The readout is almost entirely at room temperature and is highly multiplexed. MUSIC will have 576 spatial pixels in four bands at 850, 1100, 1300 and 2000 microns. MUSIC is scheduled for deployment at the CSO in the winter of 2010/2011. We present an overview of the camera design and readout and describe the current status of the instrument and some results from the highly successful May/June 2010 observing run at the CSO with the prototype camera, which verified the performance of the complete system (optics, antennas/filters, resonators, and readout) and produced the first simultaneous 3-color observations with any MKID camera.
Astronomical Telescopes and Instrumentation | 2003
B. J. Naylor; Peter A. R. Ade; James J. Bock; Charles M. Bradford; Mark Dragovan; L. Duband; L. Earle; J. Glenn; Hideo Matsuhara; Hien T. Nguyen; Minhee Yun; Jonas Zmuidzinas
Z-Spec is a broadband (195 - 310 GHz), direct-detection, millimeter-wave spectrometer with moderate resolution (R ~ 350) that we are building to observe CO rotational lines and atomic fine-structure lines in the recently discovered population of submillimeter galaxies. A large fraction of these sources cannot be identified optically and thus redshift determination is extremely difficult. The large instantaneous bandwidth of Z-Spec will allow measurement of redshifts up to z~4 via detection of two or more CO lines in a single spectrum. The spectrometer is based on a parallel-plate waveguide grating architecture that is substantially more compact than a conventional free-space grating system. The spectrometer and an array of 160 silicon nitride micromesh bolometers will be cooled to 100 mK to provide background-limited sensitivity. In addition to measuring the redshifts of sources discovered in submillimeter continuum surveys, Z-Spec will demonstrate a novel spectrometer concept well-suited for future far-infrared space missions.
Proceedings of SPIE | 2012
Loren J. Swenson; Peter K. Day; C. D. Dowell; Byeong Ho Eom; Matthew I. Hollister; Robert Jarnot; A. Kovács; H. G. LeDuc; C. M. McKenney; Ryan M. Monroe; Tony Mroczkowski; Hien T. Nguyen; Jonas Zmuidzinas
Submillimeter cameras now have up to 104 pixels (SCUBA 2). The proposed CCAT 25-meter submillimeter telescope will feature a 1 degree field-of-view. Populating the focal plane at 350 microns would require more than 106 photon-noise limited pixels. To ultimately achieve this scaling, simple detectors and high-density multiplexing are essential. We are addressing this long-term challenge through the development of frequency-multiplexed superconducting microresonator detector arrays. These arrays use lumped-element, direct-absorption resonators patterned from titanium nitride films. We will discuss our progress toward constructing a scalable 350 micron pathfinder instrument focusing on fabrication simplicity, multiplexing density, and ultimately a low per-pixel cost.
Proceedings of SPIE | 2012
S. R. Golwala; Clint Bockstiegel; Spencer Brugger; Nicole G. Czakon; Peter K. Day; Thomas P. Downes; Ran Duan; Jiansong Gao; Amandeep K. Gill; J. Glenn; Matthew I. Hollister; H. G. LeDuc; Philip R. Maloney; Benjamin A. Mazin; Sean McHugh; David P. Miller; Hien T. Nguyen; Jack Sayers; James A. Schlaerth; Seth Siegel; Anastasios Vayonakis; Philip R. Wilson; Jonas Zmuidzinas
The Multiwavelength Sub/millimeter Inductance Camera (MUSIC) is a four-band photometric imaging camera operating from the Caltech Submillimeter Observatory (CSO). MUSIC is designed to utilize 2304 microwave kinetic inductance detectors (MKIDs), with 576 MKIDs for each observing band centered on 150, 230, 290, and 350 GHz. MUSIC’s field of view (FOV) is 14′ square, and the point-spread functions (PSFs) in the four observing bands have 45′′, 31′′, 25′′, and 22′′ full-widths at half maximum (FWHM). The camera was installed in April 2012 with 25% of its nominal detector count in each band, and has subsequently completed three short sets of engineering observations and one longer duration set of early science observations. Recent results from on-sky characterization of the instrument during these observing runs are presented, including achieved map- based sensitivities from deep integrations, along with results from lab-based measurements made during the same period. In addition, recent upgrades to MUSIC, which are expected to significantly improve the sensitivity of the camera, are described.
Proceedings of SPIE | 2010
C. Darren Dowell; Michael Pohlen; Chris Pearson; Matthew Joseph Griffin; Tanya Lim; G. J. Bendo; Dominique Benielli; James J. Bock; P. Chanial; D. L. Clements; L. Conversi; Marc Ferlet; T. Fulton; Rene Gastaud; J. Glenn; Tim Grundy; S. Guest; Ken J. King; Sarah J. Leeks; L. Levenson; Nanyao Lu; Huw Morris; Hien T. Nguyen; B. O'Halloran; Seb Oliver; P. Panuzzo; Andreas Papageorgiou; E. T. Polehampton; D. Rigopoulou; Helene Roussel
We describe the current state of the ground segment of Herschel-SPIRE photometer data processing, approximately one year into the mission. The SPIRE photometer operates in two modes: scan mapping and chopped point source photometry. For each mode, the basic analysis pipeline - which follows in reverse the effects from the incidence of light on the telescope to the storage of samples from the detector electronics - is essentially the same as described pre-launch. However, the calibration parameters and detailed numerical algorithms have advanced due to the availability of commissioning and early science observations, resulting in reliable pipelines which produce accurate and sensitive photometry and maps at 250, 350, and 500 μm with minimal residual artifacts. We discuss some detailed aspects of the pipelines on the topics of: detection of cosmic ray glitches, linearization of detector response, correction for focal plane temperature drift, subtraction of detector baselines (offsets), absolute calibration, and basic map making. Several of these topics are still under study with the promise of future enhancements to the pipelines.