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Lumped Element Kinetic Inductance Detectors for space applications

Authors :
Monfardini, Alessandro
Baselmans, Jochem
Benoit, Alain
Bideaud, Aurelien
Bourrion, Olivier
Catalano, Andrea
Calvo, Martino
D'Addabbo, Antonio
Doyle, Simon
Goupy, Johannes
Sueur, Helene Le
Macias-Perez, Juan
collaboration, NIKA2
collaboration, SPACEKIDS
collaboration, B-SIDE
Publication Year :
2016

Abstract

Kinetic Inductance Detectors (KID) are now routinely used in ground-based telescopes. Large arrays, deployed in formats up to kilopixels, exhibit state-of-the-art performance at millimeter (e.g. 120-300 GHz, NIKA and NIKA2 on the IRAM 30-meters) and sub-millimeter (e.g. 350-850 GHz AMKID on APEX) wavelengths. In view of future utilizations above the atmosphere, we have studied in detail the interaction of ionizing particles with LEKID (Lumped Element KID) arrays. We have constructed a dedicated cryogenic setup that allows to reproduce the typical observing conditions of a space-borne observatory. We will report the details and conclusions from a number of measurements. We give a brief description of our short term project, consisting in flying LEKID on a stratospheric balloon named B-SIDE.<br />Comment: To appear in the SPIE 2016 Proceedings

Details

Database :
arXiv
Publication Type :
Report
Accession number :
edsarx.1606.00719
Document Type :
Working Paper
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1117/12.2231758