Photon-noise-limited cold-electron bolometer based on strong electron self-cooling for high-performance cosmology missions

Bolometers for balloon and space missions have seen extensive development because of their capacity to test primordial conditions of the Universe. The major improvements consist in lowering the operating temperature to reach higher sensitivities. Here we show that an array of 192 cold-electron bolom...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Published in:Communications physics Vol. 2; no. 1
Main Authors: Kuzmin, L. S., Pankratov, A. L., Gordeeva, A. V., Zbrozhek, V. O., Shamporov, V. A., Revin, L. S., Blagodatkin, A. V., Masi, S., de Bernardis, P.
Format: Journal Article
Language:English
Published: London Nature Publishing Group UK 03-09-2019
Subjects:
Online Access:Get full text
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
Description
Summary:Bolometers for balloon and space missions have seen extensive development because of their capacity to test primordial conditions of the Universe. The major improvements consist in lowering the operating temperature to reach higher sensitivities. Here we show that an array of 192 cold-electron bolometers (CEB) demonstrates photon-noise-limited operation at the cryostat temperature of 310 mK due to effective self-cooling of the absorber. The direct electron cooling of nanoabsorber placed between normal metal - insulator - superconductor junctions has considerably higher efficiency than indirect cooling through massive suspended platform, that requires overcoming a weak electron-phonon conductance. The electron temperature reached 120 mK without a power load, and 225 mK with a 60 pW power load with self-noise of a single bolometer below 3 ⋅ 1 0 − 18 W Hz − 1 ∕ 2 at a 0.01 pW power load. This bolometer works at electron temperature less than phonon temperature, thus being a good candidate for future space missions without the use of dilution refrigerators. Bolometers, a type of cryogenic detectors, are extensively used for astronomical applications but new technologies offer the possibility to lower the temperature they operate at in order to increase their sensitivity. The authors present the experimental realisation of a Cold-Electron Bolometer based on strong on-chip electron self-cooling in which the electrons of the sensing element are refrigerated by superconductor tunnel junctions opening the door to the use of more cost effective devices for space missions.
ISSN:2399-3650
2399-3650
DOI:10.1038/s42005-019-0206-9