J. Adema
Kapteyn Astronomical Institute
Network
Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.
Publication
Featured researches published by J. Adema.
Astronomy and Astrophysics | 2015
A. Baryshev; R. Hesper; F. P. Mena; Teun M. Klapwijk; T. A. van Kempen; M. R. Hogerheijde; B. D. Jackson; J. Adema; G. J. Gerlofsma; M. E. Bekema; J. Barkhof; L. H. R. de Haan-Stijkel; M. van den Bemt; A. Koops; K. Keizer; C. Pieters; J. Koops van het Jagt; H. Schaeffer; T. Zijlstra; M. Kroug; C. F. J. Lodewijk; K. Wielinga; W. Boland; M. W. M. de Graauw; E. F. van Dishoeck; H. Jager; Wolfgang Wild
Aims. We describe the design, construction, and characterization of the Band 9 heterodyne receivers (600–720 GHz) for the Atacama Large Millimeter/submillimeter Array (ALMA). First-light Band 9 data, obtained during ALMA commissioning and science verification phases, are presented as well. Methods. The ALMA Band 9 receiver units (so-called “cartridges”), which are installed in the telescope’s front end, have been designed to detect and down-convert two orthogonal linear polarization components of the light collected by the ALMA antennas. The light entering the front end is refocused with a compact arrangement of mirrors, which is fully contained within the cartridge. The arrangement contains a grid to separate the polarizations and two beam splitters to combine each resulting beam with a local oscillator signal. The combined beams are fed into independent double-sideband mixers, each with a corrugated feedhorn coupling the radiation by way of a waveguide with backshort cavity into an impedance-tuned superconductor-insulator-superconductor (SIS) junction that performs the heterodyne down-conversion. Finally, the generated intermediate frequency (IF) signals are amplified by cryogenic and room-temperature HEMT amplifiers and exported to the telescope’s IF back end for further processing and, finally, correlation. Results. The receivers have been constructed and tested in the laboratory and they show an excellent performance, complying with ALMA requirements. Performance statistics on all 73 Band 9 receivers are reported. Importantly, two di_erent tunnel-barrier technologies (necessitating di_erent tuning circuits) for the SIS junctions have been used, namely conventional AlOx barriers and the more recent high-current-density AlN barriers. On-sky characterization and tests of the performance of the Band 9 cartridges are presented using commissioning data. Continuum and line images of the low-mass protobinary IRAS 16293-2422 are presented which were obtained as part of the ALMA science verification program. An 8 GHz wide Band 9 spectrum extracted over a 0:300 _0:300 region near source B, containing more than 100 emission lines, illustrates the quality of the data.
international conference on infrared, millimeter, and terahertz waves | 2005
A. Baryshev; R. Hesper; B. D. Jackson; Patricio Mena; J. Barkhof; T. Zijstra; C. F. J. Lodewijk; G. Gerlofsma; J. Adema; R. Rivas; K. Keizer; M. E. Bekema; A. Koops; Wolfgang Wild; Teun M. Klapwijk
The ALMA band 9 cartridge is a compact receiver unit for the Atacama large millimeter array (ALMA) containing the core of a 600-720 GHz heterodyne front end, including a solid-state local oscillator; broadband SIS mixers; and a 4-12 GHz IF amplifier chain. This paper describes the design and performance of the first band 9 cartridge. The experience gained with this unit is being used to optimize the design in preparation for the production of sufficient cartridges to fully populate the ALMA and ALMA compact arrays (ultimately requiring roughly 80 cartridges).
Proceedings of SPIE | 2012
A. V. Khudchenko; R. Hesper; A. Baryshev; Gerrit Gerlofma; J. Barkhof; J. Adema; Patricio Mena; Teun M. Klapwijk; Marco Spaans
For high-frequency observational bands like ALMA (Atacama Large Millimeter Array) Band 9 (600—720 GHz), which tend to be dominated by atmospheric noise, implementation of sideband-separating mixers can reduce, up to a factor of two, the integration time needed to reach a certain signal-to-noise ratio for spectral line observations. Because of very high oversubscription factor for observation in ALMA Band 9, an upgrade of the current Double Sideband (DSB) mixer to a Two Sideband (2SB) configuration is a promising option for future ALMA development. Here we present a developed 2SB mixer and a modified cartridge design. The 2SB mixer includes a waveguide RF hybrid block, which have been produced on a micro-milling machine and equipped with standard Band 9 SIS mixer devices. These two SIS mixers have been separately tested in DSB mode. The SSB noise temperature is within the ALMA requirements of 336 K over 80% of the band, and 500 K over the entire band. The 2SB mixer has the sideband rejection ratio better than 12 dB over the full RF band, which is also well within the ALMA specifications of 10 dB.
Astronomy and Astrophysics | 2018
Victor Belitsky; Igor Lapkin; Mathias Fredrixon; Denis Meledin; Erik Sundin; Bhushan Billade; Sven-Erik Ferm; Alexey Pavolotskiy; Hawal Marouf Rashid; Magnus Strandberg; Vincent Desmaris; Andrey Ermakov; Sascha Krause; Michael Olberg; Parisa Yadranjee Aghdam; Sareh Shafiee; Per Bergman; Elvire De Beck; Hans Olofsson; John Conway; C. De Breuck; K. Immer; Pavel A. Yagoubov; F. M. Montenegro-Montes; Karl Torstensson; J. P. Pérez-Beaupuits; T. Klein; W. Boland; A. Baryshev; R. Hesper
Context: We describe the new SEPIA (Swedish-ESO PI Instrument for APEX) receiver, which was designed and built by the Group for Advanced Receiver Development (GARD), at Onsala Space Observatory (OSO) in collaboration with ESO. It was installed and commissioned at the APEX telescope during 2015 with an ALMA Band 5 receiver channel and updated with a new frequency channel (ALMA Band 9) in February 2016. Aims: This manuscript aims to provide, for observers who use the SEPIA receiver, a reference in terms of the hardware description, optics and performance as well as the commissioning results. Methods: Out of three available receiver cartridge positions in SEPIA, the two current frequency channels, corresponding to ALMA Band 5, the RF band 158--211 GHz, and Band 9, the RF band 600--722 GHz, provide state-of-the-art dual polarization receivers. The Band 5 frequency channel uses 2SB SIS mixers with an average SSB noise temperature around 45K with IF (intermediate frequency) band 4--8 GHz for each sideband providing total 4x4 GHz IF band. The Band 9 frequency channel uses DSB SIS mixers with a noise temperature of 75--125K with IF band 4--12 GHz for each polarization. Results: Both current SEPIA receiver channels are available to all APEX observers.
Astronomy and Astrophysics | 2018
Victor Belitsky; M. Bylund; Vincent Desmaris; Andrey Ermakov; Sven-Erik Ferm; Mathias Fredrixon; Sascha Krause; Igor Lapkin; Denis Meledin; Alexey Pavolotsky; Hawal Marouf Rashid; Sareh Shafiee; Magnus Strandberg; Erik Sundin; P. Yadranjee Aghdam; R. Hesper; J. Barkhof; M. E. Bekema; J. Adema; R. de Haan; A. Koops; W. Boland; P. Yagoubov; G. Marconi; G. Siringo; E. M. L. Humphreys; G. H. Tan; R. Laing; L. Testi; Tony Mroczkowski
We describe the design, performance, and commissioning results for the new ALMA Band 5 receiver channel, 163–211 GHz, which is in the final stage of full deployment and expected to be available for observations in 2018. This manuscript provides the description of the new ALMA Band 5 receiver cartridge and serves as a reference for observers using the ALMA Band 5 receiver for observations. At the time of writing this paper, the ALMA Band 5 Production Consortium consisting of NOVA Instrumentation group, based in Groningen, NL, and GARD in Sweden have produced and delivered to ALMA Observatory over 60 receiver cartridges. All 60 cartridges fulfil the new more stringent specifications for Band 5 and demonstrate excellent noise temperatures, typically below 45 K single sideband (SSB) at 4 K detector physical temperature and below 35 K SSB at 3.5 K (typical for operation at the ALMA Frontend), providing the average sideband rejection better than 15 dB, and the integrated cross-polarization level better than –25 dB. The 70 warm cartridge assemblies, hosting Band 5 local oscillator and DC bias electronics, have been produced and delivered to ALMA by NRAO. The commissioning results confirm the excellent performance of the receivers.
The Messenger | 2016
K. Immer; Victor Belitsky; Michael Olberg; C. De Breuck; F. Montenegro-Montes; J. P. Pérez-Beaupuits; K. J. E. Torstensson; Bhushan Billade; E. De Beck; Andrey Ermakov; Sven-Erik Ferm; Mathias Fredrixon; Igor Lapkin; Denis Meledin; A. Pavolotsky; Magnus Strandberg; Erik Sundin; V. Arumugam; M. Galametz; E. M. L. Humphreys; T. Klein; J. Adema; J. Barkhof; A. Baryshev; W. Boland; R. Hesper; T. M. Klapwijk
16th International Symposium on Space-Terahertz Technology, Chalmers, Sweden, May 2-4, 2005 | 2005
R. Hesper; B. D. Jackson; A. Baryshev; J. Adema; K. Wielinga; M. Kroug; T. Zijlstra; G. Gerlofsma; M. E. Bekema; K. Keizer; H. Schaeffer; J. Barkhof; F. P. Mena; A. Koops; R. Rivas; T.M. Klapwijk; Wolfgang Wild
18th International Symposium on Space Terahertz Technology, held March 21-23, 2007, at California Institute of Technology, Pasadena, CA USA | 2007
A. Baryshev; R. Hesper; F. P. Mena; B. D. Jackson; J. Adema; J. Barkhof; Wolfgang Wild; M. Candotti; M. Whale; C. F. J. Lodewijk; D. Loudkov; T. Zijlstra; T. M. Klapwijk
Proceedings of the International Symposium on Space Terahertz Technology | 2006
A. Baryshev; R. Hesper; F. P. Mena; B. D. Jackson; J. Adema; H. Schaeffer; J. Barkhof; Wolfgang Wild; M. Candotti; C. F. J. Lodewijk; D. Loudkov; T. Zijlstra; Noroozian; T. M. Klapwijk
Archive | 2009
B. D. Jackson; R. Hesper; J. Adema; J. Barkhof; A. Baryshev; T. Zijlstra; Song-Chun Zhu; Teun M. Klapwijk