Your browser doesn't support javascript.
loading
Numerical optimization of integrating cavities for diffraction-limited millimeter-wave bolometer arrays.
Glenn, Jason; Chattopadhyay, Goutam; Edgington, Samantha F; Lange, Andrew E; Bock, James J; Mauskopf, Philip D; Lee, Adrian T.
Afiliação
  • Glenn J; Center for Astrophysics and Space Astronomy, University of Colorado, Boulder 80309, USA. jglenn@casa.colorado.edu
Appl Opt ; 41(1): 136-42, 2002 Jan 01.
Article em En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-11900429
ABSTRACT
Far-infrared to millimeter-wave bolometers designed to make astronomical observations are typically encased in integrating cavities at the termination of feedhorns or Winston cones. This photometer combination maximizes absorption of radiation, enables the absorber area to be minimized, and controls the directivity of absorption, thereby reducing susceptibility to stray light. In the next decade, arrays of hundreds of silicon nitride micromesh bolometers with planar architectures will be used in ground-based, suborbital, and orbital platforms for astronomy. The optimization of integrating cavity designs is required for achieving the highest possible sensitivity for these arrays. We report numerical simulations of the electromagnetic fields in integrating cavities with an infinite plane-parallel geometry formed by a solid reflecting backshort and the back surface of a feedhorn array block. Performance of this architecture for the bolometer array camera (Bolocam) for cosmology at a frequency of 214 GHz is investigated. We explore the sensitivity of absorption efficiency to absorber impedance and backshort location and the magnitude of leakage from cavities. The simulations are compared with experimental data from a room-temperature scale model and with the performance of Bolocam at a temperature of 300 mK. The main results of the simulations for Bolocam-type cavities are that (1) monochromatic absorptions as high as 95% are achievable with <1% cross talk between neighboring cavities, (2) the optimum absorber impedances are 400 ohms/sq, but with a broad maximum from approximately 150 to approximately 700 ohms/sq, and (3) maximum absorption is achieved with absorber diameters > or = 1.5 lambda. Good general agreement between the simulations and the experiments was found.
Buscar no Google
Base de dados: MEDLINE Idioma: En Ano de publicação: 2002 Tipo de documento: Article
Buscar no Google
Base de dados: MEDLINE Idioma: En Ano de publicação: 2002 Tipo de documento: Article