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Featured researches published by James A. Schlaerth.


Proceedings of SPIE | 2010

An open-source readout for MKIDs

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

MUSIC for sub/millimeter astrophysics

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.


Proceedings of SPIE | 2012

The status of MUSIC: the multiwavelength sub-millimeter inductance camera

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

MKID multicolor array status and results from DemoCam

James A. Schlaerth; Nicole G. Czakon; Peter K. Day; Thomas P. Downes; Ran Duan; Jiansong Gao; J. Glenn; S. R. Golwala; Matthew I. Hollister; H. G. LeDuc; Benjamin A. Mazin; Philip R. Maloney; Hien T. Nguyen; Jack Sayers; Seth Siegel; John E. Vaillancourt; Anastasios Vayonakis; Philip R. Wilson; Jonas Zmuidzinas

We present the results of the latest multicolor Microwave Kinetic Inductance Detector (MKID) focal plane arrays in the submillimeter. The new detectors on the arrays are superconducting resonators which combine a coplanar waveguide section with an interdigitated capacitor, or IDC. To avoid out-of-band pickup by the capacitor, a stepped-impedance filter is used to prevent radiation from reaching the absorptive aluminum section of the resonator. These arrays are tested in the preliminary demonstration instrument, DemoCam, a precursor to the Multicolor Submillimeter Inductance Camera, MUSIC. We present laboratory results of the responsivity to light both in the laboratory and at the Caltech Submillimeter Observatory. We assess the performance of the detectors in filtering out-of-band radiation, and find the level of excess load and its effect on detector performance. We also look at the array design characteristics, and the implications for the optimization of sensitivities expected by MUSIC.


Proceedings of SPIE | 2010

Optics for MUSIC: a new (sub)millimeter camera for the Caltech Submillimeter Observatory

Jack Sayers; Nicole G. Czakon; Peter K. Day; Thomas P. Downes; Ran P. Duan; Jiansong Gao; J. Glenn; S. R. Golwala; Matt I. Hollister; H. G. LeDuc; Benjamin A. Mazin; Philip R. Maloney; Hien T. Nguyen; James A. Schlaerth; Seth Siegel; John E. Vaillancourt; Anastasios Vayonakis; Philip R. Wilson; Jonas Zmuidzinas

We will present the design and implementation, along with calculations and some measurements of the performance, of the room-temperature and cryogenic optics for MUSIC, a new (sub)millimeter camera we are developing for the Caltech Submm Observatory (CSO). The design consists of two focusing elements in addition to the CSO primary and secondary mirrors: a warm off-axis elliptical mirror and a cryogenic (4K) lens. These optics will provide a 14 arcmin field of view that is diffraction limited in all four of the MUSIC observing bands (2.00, 1.33, 1.02, and 0.86 mm). A cold (4K) Lyot stop will be used to define the primary mirror illumination, which will be maximized while keeping spillover at the sub 1% level. The MUSIC focal plane will be populated with broadband phased antenna arrays that efficiently couple to factor of (see manuscript) 3 in bandwidth,1, 2 and each pixel on the focal plane will be read out via a set of four lumped element filters that define the MUSIC observing bands (i.e., each pixel on the focal plane simultaneously observes in all four bands). Finally, a series of dielectric and metal-mesh low pass filters have been implemented to reduce the optical power load on the MUSIC cryogenic stages to a quasi-negligible level while maintaining good transmission in-band.


Proceedings of SPIE | 2010

The cryomechanical design of MUSIC: a novel imaging instrument for millimeter-wave astrophysics at the Caltech Submillimeter Observatory

Matthew I. Hollister; Nicole G. Czakon; Peter K. Day; Thomas P. Downes; Ran Duan; Jiansong Gao; J. Glenn; S. R. Golwala; H. G. LeDuc; P. R. Maloney; Benjamin A. Mazin; Hien Trong Nguyen; Jack Sayers; James A. Schlaerth; Seth Siegel; John E. Vaillancourt; Anastasios Vayonakis; Philip R. Wilson; Jonas Zmuidzinas

MUSIC (Multicolor Submillimeter kinetic Inductance Camera) is a new facility instrument for the Caltech Submillimeter Observatory (Mauna Kea, Hawaii) developed as a collaborative effect of Caltech, JPL, the University of Colorado at Boulder and UC Santa Barbara, and is due for initial commissioning in early 2011. MUSIC utilizes a new class of superconducting photon detectors known as microwave kinetic inductance detectors (MKIDs), an emergent technology that offers considerable advantages over current types of detectors for submillimeter and millimeter direct detection. MUSIC will operate a focal plane of 576 spatial pixels, where each pixel is a slot line antenna coupled to multiple detectors through on-chip, lumped-element filters, allowing simultaneously imaging in four bands at 0.86, 1.02, 1.33 and 2.00 mm. The MUSIC instrument is designed for closed-cycle operation, combining a pulse tube cooler with a two-stage Helium-3 adsorption refrigerator, providing a focal plane temperature of 0.25 K with intermediate temperature stages at approximately 50, 4 and 0.4 K for buffering heat loads and heat sinking of optical filters. Detector readout is achieved using semi-rigid coaxial cables from room temperature to the focal plane, with cryogenic HEMT amplifiers operating at 4 K. Several hundred detectors may be multiplexed in frequency space through one signal line and amplifier. This paper discusses the design of the instrument cryogenic hardware, including a number of features unique to the implementation of superconducting detectors. Predicted performance data for the instrument system will also be presented and discussed.


THE THIRTEENTH INTERNATIONAL WORKSHOP ON LOW TEMPERATURE DETECTORS—LTD13 | 2009

The MKID Camera

P. R. Maloney; Nicole G. Czakon; Peter K. Day; Ran P. Duan; Jiansong Gao; J. Glenn; S. R. Golwala; Matthew I. Hollister; H. G. LeDuc; Benjamin A. Mazin; H. T. Nguyen; Jack Sayers; James A. Schlaerth; John E. Vaillancourt; Anastasios Vayonakis; Philip R. Wilson; Jonas Zmuidzinas

The MKID Camera project is a collaborative effort of Caltech, JPL, the University of Colorado, and UC Santa Barbara to develop a large‐format, multi‐color millimeter and submillimeter‐wavelength camera for astronomy using microwave kinetic inductance detectors (MKIDs). These are superconducting, micro‐resonators fabricated from thin aluminum and niobium films. We couple the MKIDs to multi‐slot antennas and measure the change in surface impedance produced by photon‐induced breaking of Cooper pairs. The readout is almost entirely at room temperature and can be highly multiplexed; in principle hundreds or even thousands of resonators could be read out on a single feedline. The camera will have 576 spatial pixels that image simultaneously in four bands at 750, 850, 1100 and 1300 microns. It is scheduled for deployment at the Caltech Submillimeter Observatory in the summer of 2010. We present an overview of the camera design and readout and describe the current status of testing and fabrication.


Proceedings of SPIE | 2008

A microwave kinetic inductance camera for sub/millimeter astrophysics

J. Glenn; Peter K. Day; Matt Ferry; Jiansong Gao; S. R. Golwala; Shwetank Kumar; H. G. LeDuc; Philip R. Maloney; Benjamin A. Mazin; Hien T. Nguyen; Jack Sayers; James A. Schlaerth; John E. Vaillancourt; Anastasios Vayokanis; Jonas Zmuidzinas

The MKID Camera is a millimeter/submillimeter instrument being built for astronomical observations from the Caltech Submillimeter Observatory. It utilizes microwave kinetic inductance detectors, which are rapidly achieving near-BLIP sensitivity for ground-based observations, and a software-defined radio readout technique for elegant multiplexing of a large number of detectors. The Camera will have 592 pixels distributed over 16 tiles in the focal plane, with four colors per pixel matched to the 750 μm, 850 μm, and 1.0 - 1.5 mm (split in two) atmospheric transmission windows. As a precursor to building the full-up camera and to enable ongoing detector testing, we have built a DemoCam comprised of a 16-pixel MKID array with which we have made preliminary astronomical observations. These observations demonstrate the viability of MKIDs for submillimeter astronomy, provide insight into systematic design issues that must be considered for MKID-based instruments, and they are the first astronomical observations with antenna-coupled superconducting detectors. In this paper, we describe the basic systems and specifications of the MKID Camera, we describe our DemoCam observations, and we comment on the status of submillimeter MKID sensitivities.


Proceedings of SPIE | 2010

Optimization of MKID Noise Performance Via Readout Technique for Astronomical Applications

Nicole G. Czakon; James A. Schlaerth; Peter K. Day; Thomas P. Downes; Ran P. Duan; Jiansong Gao; J. Glenn; S. R. Golwala; Matt I. Hollister; H. G. LeDuc; Benjamin A. Mazin; P. R. Maloney; Hien T. Nguyen; Jack Sayers; Seth Siegel; John E. Vaillancourt; Anastasios Vayonakis; Philip R. Wilson; Jonas Zmuidzinas

Detectors employing superconducting microwave kinetic inductance detectors (MKIDs) can be read out by measuring changes in either the resonator frequency or dissipation. We will discuss the pros and cons of both methods, in particular, the readout method strategies being explored for the Multiwavelength Sub/millimeter Inductance Camera (MUSIC) to be commissioned at the CSO in 2010. As predicted theoretically and observed experimentally, the frequency responsivity is larger than the dissipation responsivity, by a factor of 2-4 under typical conditions. In the absence of any other noise contributions, it should be easier to overcome amplifier noise by simply using frequency readout. The resonators, however, exhibit excess frequency noise which has been ascribed to a surface distribution of two-level fluctuators sensitive to specific device geometries and fabrication techniques. Impressive dark noise performance has been achieved using modified resonator geometries employing interdigitated capacitors (IDCs). To date, our noise measurement and modeling efforts have assumed an onresonance readout, with the carrier power set well below the nonlinear regime. Several experimental indicators suggested to us that the optimal readout technique may in fact require a higher readout power, with the carrier tuned somewhat off resonance, and that a careful systematic study of the optimal readout conditions was needed. We will present the results of such a study, and discuss the optimum readout conditions as well as the performance that can be achieved relative to BLIP.


THE THIRTEENTH INTERNATIONAL WORKSHOP ON LOW TEMPERATURE DETECTORS—LTD13 | 2009

Sensitivity Optimization of Millimeter/Submillimeter MKID Camera Pixel Device Design

James A. Schlaerth; S. R. Golwala; Jonas Zmuidzinas; Anastasios Vayonakis; Js. Gao; Nicole G. Czakon; Peter K. Day; J. Glenn; Matthew I. Hollister; H. G. LeDuc; P. R. Maloney; Benjamin A. Mazin; H. T. Nguyen; Jack Sayers; John E. Vaillancourt

We are using Microwave Kinetic Inductance Detectors in a sub/millimeter camera for the Caltech Submillimeter Observatory. These detectors are microwave resonators that rely on submillimeter and millimeter-wave photons to break Cooper pairs, changing the surface impedance. This changes the resonator frequency and quality factor, Q, and is measured by probe signals sent through a feedline coupled to the detectors. The camera will be divided into 16 independent readout tiles, each of which will fit 144 resonators at different frequencies into 360 MHz of bandwidth. We discuss the effect of readout power and single pixel frequency responsivity on the NEP of the detectors. Finally, we consider the mapping speeds of a full tile as a function of Q, which is controlled through the detector volume. A lower Q at fixed optical power implies greater responsivity, while a higher Q decreases the collision probability - the likelihood that any two resonators will have close enough resonant frequencies for crosstalk to be unacceptably high. We find the optimal design based on these constraints, and the corresponding mapping speeds expected at the telescope.

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J. Glenn

University of Colorado Boulder

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Jonas Zmuidzinas

California Polytechnic State University

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Anastasios Vayonakis

California Institute of Technology

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Jack Sayers

California Institute of Technology

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S. R. Golwala

California Institute of Technology

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H. G. LeDuc

Jet Propulsion Laboratory

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John E. Vaillancourt

Universities Space Research Association

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Peter K. Day

Jet Propulsion Laboratory

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