Particle Response of Antenna-Coupled TES Arrays: Results from SPIDER and the Laboratory

B. Osherson,J. P. Filippini,J. Fu, R. V. Gramillano,R. Gualtieri, E. C. Shaw, P. A. R. Ade,M. Amiri, S. J. Benton, J. J. Bock,J. R. Bond,S. A. Bryan, H. C. Chiang,C. R. Contaldi,O. Dore, A. A. Fraisse, A. E. Gambrel, N. N. Gandilo,J. E. Gudmundsson,M. Halpern, J. W. Hartley,M. Hasselfield,G. Hilton, W. Holmes, V. V. Hristov,K. D. Irwin,W. C. Jones,Z. D. Kermish, P. V. Mason, K. Megerian,L. Moncelsi, T. A. Morford,J. M. Nagy,C. B. Netterfield, I. L. Padilla, A. S. Rahlin,C. Reintsema,J. E. Ruhl, M. C. Runyan, J. A. Shariff,J. D. Soler, A. Trangsrud,C. Tucker, R. S. Tucker, A. D. Turner, A. C. Weber, D. V. Wiebe,E. Y. Young

Journal of Low Temperature Physics(2020)

引用 5|浏览179
暂无评分
摘要
Future mm-wave and sub-mm space missions will employ large arrays of multiplexed transition-edge-sensor (TES) bolometers. Such instruments must contend with the high flux of cosmic rays beyond our atmosphere that induce ‘glitches’ in bolometer data, which posed a challenge to data analysis from the Planck bolometers. Future instruments will face the additional challenges of shared substrate wafers and multiplexed readout wiring. In this work, we explore the susceptibility of modern TES arrays to the cosmic ray environment of space using two data sets: the 2015 long-duration balloon flight of the SPIDER cosmic microwave background polarimeter, and a laboratory exposure of SPIDER flight hardware to radioactive sources. We find manageable glitch rates and short glitch durations, leading to minimal effect on SPIDER analysis. We constrain energy propagation within the substrate through a study of multi-detector coincidences and give a preliminary look at pulse shapes in laboratory data.
更多
查看译文
关键词
Cosmic microwave background, Transition-edge sensor, Bolometer, Cosmic ray
AI 理解论文
溯源树
样例
生成溯源树,研究论文发展脉络
Chat Paper
正在生成论文摘要