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1.
Nature ; 586(7827): 42-46, 2020 10.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32999482

RESUMO

Sensitive microwave detectors are essential in radioastronomy1, dark-matter axion searches2 and superconducting quantum information science3,4. The conventional strategy to obtain higher-sensitivity bolometry is the nanofabrication of ever smaller devices to augment the thermal response5-7. However, it is difficult to obtain efficient photon coupling and to maintain the material properties in a device with a large surface-to-volume ratio owing to surface contamination. Here we present an ultimately thin bolometric sensor based on monolayer graphene. To utilize the minute electronic specific heat and thermal conductivity of graphene, we develop a superconductor-graphene-superconductor Josephson junction8-13 bolometer embedded in a microwave resonator with a resonance frequency of 7.9 gigahertz and over 99 per cent coupling efficiency. The dependence of the Josephson switching current on the operating temperature, charge density, input power and frequency shows a noise-equivalent power of 7 × 10-19 watts per square-root hertz, which corresponds to an energy resolution of a single 32-gigahertz photon14, reaching the fundamental limit imposed by intrinsic thermal fluctuations at 0.19 kelvin. Our results establish that two-dimensional materials could enable the development of bolometers with the highest sensitivity allowed by the laws of thermodynamics.

2.
Opt Express ; 27(24): 34639-34654, 2019 Nov 25.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31878651

RESUMO

Photonic integrated circuit (PIC) phased arrays can be an enabling technology for a broad range of applications including free-space laser communications on compact moving platforms. However, scaling PIC phased arrays to a large number of array elements is limited by the large size and high power consumption of individual phase shifters used for beam steering. In this paper, we demonstrate silicon PIC phased array beam steering based on thermally tuned ultracompact microring resonator phase shifters with a radius of a few microns. These resonators integrated with micro-heaters are designed to be strongly coupled to an external waveguide, thereby providing a large and adjustable phase shift with a small residual amplitude modulation while consuming an average power of 0.4 mW. We also introduce near-field and far-field characterization techniques to enable the calibration and programming of resonator phase shifters in the phased array. With such compact phase shifters, we demonstrate beam steering with a 1x8 PIC phased array. The small size of these resonator phase shifters will enable low-power and ultra-large scale PIC phased arrays for long distance laser communication systems.

3.
Appl Opt ; 50(12): 1786-91, 2011 Apr 20.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21509072

RESUMO

A tunable device based on chirped microstrip delay lines is proposed to precompensate at the transmitter; the chromatic dispersion accumulated during optical fiber propagation. Compensated dispersion is finely tuned by changing the effective dielectric constant of the microstrip line by means of moving dielectric perturbers. Compensation up to 51 ps/GHz necessary to propagate over 400 km uncompensated standard single-mode fiber at 10 Gb/s is demonstrated. The proposed solution does not require coherent detection and can find application in metropolitan and regional area networks, where the physical path traced by each channel can change owing to the traffic routing, requiring the dynamic compensation of different amounts of accumulated dispersion.

4.
Sci Rep ; 10(1): 248, 2020 Jan 14.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31937815

RESUMO

One of the most challenging obstacles to realizing exascale computing is minimizing the energy consumption of L2 cache, main memory, and interconnects to that memory. For promising cryogenic computing schemes utilizing Josephson junction superconducting logic, this obstacle is exacerbated by the cryogenic system requirements that expose the technology's lack of high-density, high-speed and power-efficient memory. Here we demonstrate an array of cryogenic memory cells consisting of a non-volatile three-terminal magnetic tunnel junction element driven by the spin Hall effect, combined with a superconducting heater-cryotron bit-select element. The write energy of these memory elements is roughly 8 pJ with a bit-select element, designed to achieve a minimum overhead power consumption of about 30%. Individual magnetic memory cells measured at 4 K show reliable switching with write error rates below 10-6, and a 4 × 4 array can be fully addressed with bit select error rates of 10-6. This demonstration is a first step towards a full cryogenic memory architecture targeting energy and performance specifications appropriate for applications in superconducting high performance and quantum computing control systems, which require significant memory resources operating at 4 K.

5.
Phys Rev Appl ; 12(3)2019.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33033742

RESUMO

We investigate the accessibility and projected low-noise performance of single soliton Kerr frequency combs in silicon nitride microresonators enabled by operating at cryogenic temperatures as low as 7 K. The resulting two orders of magnitude reduction in the thermo-refractive coefficient relative to room-temperature enables direct access to single bright Kerr soliton states through adiabatic frequency tuning of the pump laser while remaining in thermal equilibrium. Our experimental results, supported by theoretical modeling, show that single solitons are easily accessible at temperatures below 60 K for the microresonator device under study. We further demonstrate that the cryogenic temperature primarily impacts the thermo-refractive coefficient. Other parameters critical to the generation of solitons, such as quality factor, dispersion, and effective nonlinearity, are unaltered. Finally, we discuss the potential improvement in thermo-refractive noise resulting from cryogenic operation. The results of this study open up new directions in advancing chip-scale frequency comb optical clocks and metrology at cryogenic temperatures.

6.
Rev Sci Instrum ; 84(3): 034704, 2013 Mar.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23556834

RESUMO

In this work we introduce a system for 2-port microwave calibration at millikelvin temperatures operating at the coldest stage of a dilution refrigerator by use of an adapted thru-reflect-line algorithm. We show that this can be an effective tool for characterizing common 50 Ω microwave components with better than 0.1 dB accuracy at temperatures that are relevant to many current experiments in superconducting quantum information.

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