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Dive into the research topics where Jonas Zmuidzinas is active.

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Featured researches published by Jonas Zmuidzinas.


Proceedings of SPIE | 2008

A broadband millimeter-wave spectrometer Z-spec: sensitivity and ULIRGs

Hanae Inami; M. Bradford; James E. Aguirre; L. Earle; B. J. Naylor; Hideo Matsuhara; J. Glenn; Hien T. Nguyen; James J. Bock; Jonas Zmuidzinas; Youichi Ohyama

Z-Spec is a cryogenic, broadband, millimeter-wave grating spectrometer. It is capable of obtaining many spectral lines simultaneously because of its unprecedented broad bandwidth (185-305GHz). The bandpass covers the 1mm atmospheric transmission window with a resolving power of 250-400. Z-Spec uses 160 silicon nitride micromesh bolometers cooled down to less than 100mK for background-limited performance. The unique capability of Z-Spec to detect multiple lines simultaneously allows us to obtain information efficiently on the physical and chemical conditions of nearby Ultra-luminous Infrared Galaxies (ULIRGs) powered by starbursts or Active Galactic Nuclei. Here we report on new millimeter-wave broadband data for ULIRGs acquired with Z-Spec and the noise performance and achieved sensitivity in observations with the CSO. We found that during the observations the noise scales with the atmospheric opacity and can be explained well by our sensitivity model, considering the photon noise originating from the sky and the telescope, as well as the detector and electronics noise. The photon noise is found to dominate the total noise.


Proceedings of SPIE | 2016

Responsivity boosting in FIR TiN LEKIDs using phonon recycling: simulations and array design

Adalyn Fyhrie; C. M. McKenney; J. Glenn; H. G. LeDuc; Jiansong Gao; Peter K. Day; Jonas Zmuidzinas

To characterize further the cosmic star formation history at high redshifts, a large-area survey by a cryogenic 4-6 meter class telescope with a focal plane populated by tens of thousands of far-infrared (FIR, 30-300 μm) detectors with broadband detector noise equivalent powers (NEPs) on the order of 3×10-9 W/√ Hz is needed. Ideal detectors for such a surveyor do not yet exist. As a demonstration of one technique for approaching the ultra-low NEPs required by this surveyor, we present the design of an array of 96 350 µm KIDs that utilize phonon recycling to boost responsivity. Our KID array is fabricated with TiN deposited on a silicon-on-insulator (SOI) wafer, which is a 2 μm thick layer of silicon bonded to a thicker slab of silicon by a thin oxide layer. The backside thick slab is etched away underneath the absorbers so that the inductors are suspended on just the 2 μm membrane. The intent is that quasiparticle recombination phonons are trapped in the thin membrane, thereby increasing their likelihood of being re-absorbed by the KID to break additional Cooper pairs and boost responsivity. We also present a Monte-Carlo simulation that predicts the amount of signal boost expected from phonon recycling given different detector geometries and illumination strategies. For our current array geometry, the simulation predicts a measurable 50% boost in responsivity.


Space Telescopes and Instrumentation 2018: Optical, Infrared, and Millimeter Wave | 2018

Overview of the Origins Space telescope: science drivers to observatory requirements

Margaret M. Meixner; Asantha R. Cooray; David T. Leisawitz; Edwin A. Bergin; Kimberly Ennico-Smith; James Monie Bauer; Jonathan J. Fortney; Lisa Kaltenegger; Gary J. Melnick; Stefanie N. Milam; Desika Narayanan; Deborah Lynne Padgett; Klaus Pontoppidan; Alexandra Pope; Thomas L. Roellig; Karin Sandstrom; Kevin B. Stevenson; Kate Su; J. D. Vieira; Edward L. Wright; Jonas Zmuidzinas; Martina C. Wiedner; M. Gerin; Itsuki Sakon; Ruth Chaing Carter; Michael DiPirro; Dominic J. Benford; Denis Burgarella; Sean J. Carey; Elvire DeBeck

The Origins Space Telescope (OST) mission concept study is the subject of one of the four science and technology definition studies supported by NASA Headquarters to prepare for the 2020 Astronomy and Astrophysics Decadal Survey. OST will survey the most distant galaxies to discern the rise of metals and dust and to unveil the co-evolution of galaxy and blackhole formation, study the Milky Way to follow the path of water from the interstellar medium to habitable worlds in planetary systems, and measure biosignatures from exoplanets. This paper describes the science drivers and how they drove key requirements for OST Mission Concept 2, which will operate between ~5 and ~600 microns with a JWST sized telescope. Mission Concept 2 for the OST study optimizes the engineering for the key science cases into a powerful and more economical observatory compared to Mission Concept 1.


Space Telescopes and Instrumentation 2018: Optical, Infrared, and Millimeter Wave | 2018

The Galaxy Evolution Probe: a concept for a mid and far-infrared space observatory

Carole Tucker; J. Glenn; C. M. Bradford; Rashied Amini; Katey Alatalo; Lee Armus; Andrew J. Benson; D. Farrah; Adalyn Fyhrie; Sarah Lipscy; Bradley D. Moore; David C. Redding; Michael Rogers; Mark Shannon; John Steeves; Jonas Zmuidzinas; Jeremy Darling; P. K. Day; Jeanette Domber; Brandon S. Hensley; Gordon Wu

The Galaxy Evolution Probe (GEP) is a concept for a mid and far-infrared space observatory designed to survey sky for star-forming galaxies from redshifts of z = 0 to beyond z = 4. Furthering our knowledge of galaxy formation requires uniform surveys of star-forming galaxies over a large range of redshifts and environments to accurately describe star formation, supermassive black hole growth, and interactions between these processes in galaxies. The GEP design includes a 2 m diameter SiC telescope actively cooled to 4 K and two instruments: (1) An imager to detect star-forming galaxies and measure their redshifts photometrically using emission features of polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons. It will cover wavelengths from 10 to 400 μm, with 23 spectral resolution R = 8 filter-defined bands from 10 to 95 μm and five R = 3.5 bands from 95 to 400 μm. (2) A 24 – 193 μm, R = 200 dispersive spectrometer for redshift confirmation, identification of active galactic nuclei, and interstellar astrophysics using atomic fine-structure lines. The GEP will observe from a Sun-Earth L2 orbit, with a design lifetime of four years, devoted first to galaxy surveys with the imager and second to follow-up spectroscopy. The focal planes of the imager and the spectrometer will utilize KIDs, with the spectrometer comprised of four slit-coupled diffraction gratings feeding the KIDs. Cooling for the telescope, optics, and KID amplifiers will be provided by solar-powered cryocoolers, with a multi-stage adiabatic demagnetization refrigerator providing 100 mK cooling for the KIDs.


Millimeter, Submillimeter, and Far-Infrared Detectors and Instrumentation for Astronomy IX | 2018

Progress towards ultra sensitive KIDs for future far-infrared missions: a focus on recombination times

Adalyn Fyhrie; J. Glenn; P. K. Day; Henry G. Leduc; Jonas Zmuidzinas; Christopher McKenney

Future generations of far-infrared (FIR) telescopes will need detectors with noise-equivalent powers on the order of 5 x 10^(-20) W/Hz^(1/2) in order to be photon background limited by astrophysical sources. One such mission concept in development is the Galaxy Evolution Probe (GEP), which will characterize galaxy formation and evolution from z=0 to beyond z=4. Kinetic inductance detectors (KIDs) have been baselined for the GEP for spectroscopy and imaging science between 10 μm and 400 μm due to their intrinsic frequency multiplexability and simple readout schemes. We focus on quasiparticle recombination times as a strategy for increasing detector responsivities to move towards the NEP requirements of the GEP. We present a new model for quantifying time constants from the responses of detectors to pulses of light, and test this model on a 40 nm thick ¼ λ Al coplanar waveguide KID. We intend to use this measurement scheme to quantify the dependence of the quasiparticle recombination time on Al thickness.


Archive | 2005

Low noise NbTiN 1.25 THz SIS mixer for Herschel Space Observatory

Alexey A. Karpov; David Harry Miller; Frank Rice; Jeffrey A. Stern; Bruce Bumble; Henry G. Leduc; Jonas Zmuidzinas


Archive | 1992

Slot antenna SIS mixers for submillimeter wavelengths

Jonas Zmuidzinas; H. G. LeDuc; J. A. Stern


Archive | 2004

Fabrication of Wide-IF 200-300 GHz SIS mixers with suspended metal beam leads formed on SOI

Anu Kaul; Bruce Bumble; Karen Lee; H. G. LeDuc; Frank Rice; Jonas Zmuidzinas


Archive | 1994

Quasi-Optical SIS Mixer with a Silicon Lens for Submillimeter Astronomy

Nuray George Ugras; Jonas Zmuidzinas; H. G. LeDuc


Archive | 2009

Star Formation Through Cosmic Time: From Local Galaxies to the Early Universe

Gordon J. Stacey; Frank Bertoldi; Andrew W. Blain; C. M. Bradford; Riccardo Giovanelli; J. Glenn; Paul F. Goldsmith; Sunil Ramanlal Golwala; Thomas Nikola; Jonas Zmuidzinas

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J. Glenn

University of Colorado Boulder

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Henry G. Leduc

University of Southern California

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P. K. Day

California Institute of Technology

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H. G. LeDuc

Jet Propulsion Laboratory

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Anastasios Vayonakis

California Institute of Technology

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Bruce Bumble

Jet Propulsion Laboratory

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Frank Rice

California Institute of Technology

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James A. Schlaerth

University of Colorado Boulder

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