The Simons Array is an experiment located in the Atacama Desert in Chile that will measure the polarization anisotropy of the Cosmic Microwave Background. It consists of three telescopes that house the receivers POLARBEAR-2A, POLARBEAR-2B and POLARBEAR-2C, which will observe the CMB at 90, 150, 220 and 270 GHz with over 22,000 Transition Edge Sensor (TES) bolometers. Each receiver contains a focal plane composed of seven hexagonal arrays of lenslet-coupled sinuous antenna bolometers, with each dichroic pixel containing four TESs. The readout system uses Superconducting Quantum Interference Devices for signal amplification and digital frequency-domain multiplexing with a multiplexing factor of 40. The sensitivity of the Simons Array instruments is governed by the detectors’ noise level and the telescope optical throughput, thus an on-site signal to noise characterization is essential to evaluate the instrument. We present the post-deployment measured readout noise and methods used to improve the noise performance of POLARBEAR-2A detectors, which measure radiation in the 90 and 150 GHz bands.
The Simons Observatory (SO) will be a cosmic microwave background (CMB) survey experiment with three small-aperture telescopes (SATs) and one large-aperture telescope (LAT), which will observe from the Atacama Desert in Chile. In total, SO will field over 60,000 transition-edge sensor (TES) bolometers in six spectral bands centered between 27 and 280 GHz in order to achieve the sensitivity necessary to measure or constrain numerous cosmological quantities. The SATs are optimized for a primordial gravitational wave signal in a parity odd polarization power spectrum at a large angular scale. We will present the latest status of the SAT development.
We report on the development of commercially fabricated multi-chroic antenna coupled Transition Edge Sensor (TES) bolometer arrays for Cosmic Microwave Background (CMB) polarimetry experiments. The orders of magnitude increase in detector count for next generation CMB experiments require a new approach in detector wafer production to increase fabrication throughput.
We describe collaborative efforts with a commercial superconductor electronics fabrication facility (SeeQC Inc.) to fabricate detector arrays for CMB application. We have successfully fabricated dual-polarization, dichroic sinuous antenna-coupled TES detector arrays on 150 mm diameter wafers. We report on our recent progress on process optimization to achieve target detector performance such as superconducting transition temperature of a sensor, impedance of sensors, band pass placement, and optical efficiency. We will also report on development of orthomode transducer coupled horn detector fabrication at SeeQC Inc.
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