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Silicon nitride micromesh bolometer array for submillimeter astrophysics
Author(s) -
Anthony Turner,
J. J. Bock,
Jeffrey W. Beeman,
Jason Glenn,
Peter Hargrave,
Viktor Hristov,
Hien T. Nguyen,
Faiz Rahman,
S. Sethuraman,
Adam L. Woodcraft
Publication year - 2001
Publication title -
applied optics
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
ISSN - 0003-6935
DOI - 10.1364/ao.40.004921
Subject(s) - bolometer , physics , noise equivalent power , black body radiation , optics , johnson–nyquist noise , noise (video) , thermistor , optoelectronics , photon counting , photon , noise temperature , detector , responsivity , radiation , phase noise , image (mathematics) , quantum mechanics , artificial intelligence , computer science
We present the design and performance of a feedhorn-coupled bolometer array intended for a sensitive 350-mum photometer camera. Silicon nitride micromesh absorbers minimize the suspended mass and heat capacity of the bolometers. The temperature transducers, neutron-transmutation-doped Ge thermistors, are attached to the absorber with In bump bonds. Vapor-deposited electrical leads address the thermistors and determine the thermal conductance of the bolometers. The bolometer array demonstrates a dark noise-equivalent power of 2.9 x 10(-17) W/ radicalHz and a mean heat capacity of 1.3 pJ/K at 390 mK. We measure the optical efficiency of the bolometer and feedhorn to be 0.45-0.65 by comparing the response to blackbody calibration sources. The bolometer array demonstrates theoretical noise performance arising from the photon and the phonon and Johnson noise, with photon noise dominant under the design background conditions. We measure the ratio of total noise to photon noise to be 1.21 under an absorbed optical power of 2.4 pW. Excess noise is negligible for audio frequencies as low as 30 mHz. We summarize the trade-offs between bare and feedhorn-coupled detectors and discuss the estimated performance limits of micromesh bolometers. The bolometer array demonstrates the sensitivity required for photon noise-limited performance from a spaceborne, passively cooled telescope.

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