A superconducting-nanowire single-photon camera with 400,000 pixels
- URL: http://arxiv.org/abs/2306.09473v1
- Date: Thu, 15 Jun 2023 19:55:43 GMT
- Title: A superconducting-nanowire single-photon camera with 400,000 pixels
- Authors: Bakhrom G. Oripov, Dana S. Rampini, Jason Allmaras, Matthew D. Shaw,
Sae Woo Nam, Boris Korzh, Adam N. McCaughan
- Abstract summary: We report on the implementation and characterization of a 400,000 pixel SNSPD camera.
This is a factor of 400 improvement over the previous state-of-the-art camera.
The architecture is scalable well beyond the current demonstration.
- Score: 0.0
- License: http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
- Abstract: For the last 50 years, superconducting detectors have offered exceptional
sensitivity and speed for detecting faint electromagnetic signals in a wide
range of applications. These detectors operate at very low temperatures and
generate a minimum of excess noise, making them ideal for testing the non-local
nature of reality, investigating dark matter, mapping the early universe, and
performing quantum computation and communication. Despite their appealing
properties, however, there are currently no large-scale superconducting cameras
- even the largest demonstrations have never exceeded 20 thousand pixels. This
is especially true for one of the most promising detector technologies, the
superconducting nanowire single-photon detector (SNSPD). These detectors have
been demonstrated with system detection efficiencies of 98.0%, sub-3-ps timing
jitter, sensitivity from the ultraviolet (250nm) to the mid-infrared (10um),
and dark count rates below 6.2e-6 counts per second (cps), but despite more
than two decades of development they have never achieved an array size larger
than a kilopixel. Here, we report on the implementation and characterization of
a 400,000 pixel SNSPD camera, a factor of 400 improvement over the previous
state-of-the-art. The array spanned an area 4x2.5 mm with a 5x5um resolution,
reached unity quantum efficiency at wavelengths of 370 nm and 635 nm, counted
at a rate of 1.1e5 cps, and had a dark count rate of 1e-4 cps per detector
(corresponding to 0.13 cps over the whole array). The imaging area contains no
ancillary circuitry and the architecture is scalable well beyond the current
demonstration, paving the way for large-format superconducting cameras with
100% fill factors and near-unity detection efficiencies across a vast range of
the electromagnetic spectrum.
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