Physics and application of photon number resolving detectors based on superconducting parallel nanowires
Articolo
Data di Pubblicazione:
2009
Abstract:
Abstract. The parallel nanowire detector (PND) is a photon number resolving
(PNR) detector that uses spatial multiplexing on a subwavelength scale to
provide a single electrical output proportional to the photon number. The basic
structure of the PND is the parallel connection of several NbN superconducting
nanowires (100 nm wide, a few nm thick), folded in a meander pattern.
PNDs were fabricated on 3-4 nm thick NbN films grown on MgO(TS = 400 C)
substrates by reactive magnetron sputtering in an Ar/N2 gas mixture. The device
performance was characterized in terms of speed and sensitivity. PNDs showed
a counting rate of 80MHz and a pulse duration as low as 660 ps full-width at
half-maximum (FWHM). Building the histograms of the photoresponse peak,
no multiplication noise buildup is observable. Electrical and optical equivalent
models of the device were developed in order to study its working principle,
define design guidelines and develop an algorithm to estimate the photon number
statistics of an unknown light. In particular, the modeling provides novel insight
into the physical limit to the detection efficiency and to the reset time of these
detectors. The PND significantly outperforms existing PNR detectors in terms of
simplicity, sensitivity, speed and multiplication noise.
Tipologia CRIS:
01.01 Articolo in rivista
Elenco autori:
Mattioli, Francesco; Gaggero, Alessandro; Leoni, Roberto
Link alla scheda completa:
Pubblicato in: