Microwave kinetic inductance detectors (MKIDs) are increasingly used in ground-based (sub)millimeter-wave astronomy experiments. Two existing challenges to operating detector arrays remain in selecting excitation tones for each MKID where there are hundreds of resonators on the same feedline or network and that will yield the best combination of linearity and sensitivity. This is further complicated when operating arrays at ground-based telescopes, where variations in background loading from the atmosphere can induce significant shifts in MKID resonant frequencies and affect quality factors. We describe a quantitative method for optimal tuning of MKID arrays under dynamic loading conditions. We apply this new readout tuning technique to the 1.1 mm MKID array of the TolTEC camera at the Large Millimeter Telescope, where we incrementally change the readout power applied to investigate its effect. We perform in lab optical characterization of a CCAT Observatory MKID array to investigate optimal tuning under different loading conditions.
We present the first full-array optical characterizations of the 280 GHz aluminum-based superconducting microwave kinetic inductance detector (MKID) arrays developed at NIST, CO, USA for the CCAT Collaboration for observing galactic ecology, Sunyaev-Zel'dovich effect, galaxy evolution, and line intensity mapping. The main advantage of aluminum MKIDs is their lower 1/f noise compared to the alternative choice of titanium-nitride (TiN) MKIDs, which would reduce systematic drifts when mapping the sky. We will present the spectral response, polarization characteristics, detector efficiency, and noise equivalent power (NEP) under the relevant conditions for these detectors. Two aluminum and one TiN MKID arrays will form the detector arrays in the 280 GHz instrument module of the Prime-Cam. First light observations are expected in 2025.
We present the design and testing of spaceflight multiplexing kinetic inductance detector (KID) readout electronics for the PRobe far-Infrared Mission for Astrophysics (PRIMA). PRIMA is a mission proposed to the 2023 NASA Astrophysics Probe Explorer (APEX) Announcement of Opportunity that will answer fundamental questions about the formation of planetary systems, as well as the formation and evolution of stars, supermassive black holes, and dust over cosmic time. The readout electronics for PRIMA must be compatible with operation at Earth-Sun L2 and capable of multiplexing more than 1000 detectors over 2 GHz bandwidth while consuming around 30 W per readout chain. The electronics must also be capable of switching between the two instruments, which have different readout bands,: the hyperspectral imager (PRIMAger, 2.5-5.0 GHz) and the spectrometer (FIRESS, 0.4-2.4 GHz). We present the driving requirements, design, and measured performance of a laboratory brassboard system.
KEYWORDS: Tunable filters, Design, Field programmable gate arrays, Sensors, Signal to noise ratio, Digital signal processing, Signal filtering, Equipment, Prototyping
The next-generation mm/sub-mm/far-IR astronomy will in part be enabled by advanced digital signal processing (DSP) techniques. The Prime-Cam instrument of the Fred Young Submillimeter Telescope (FYST), featuring the largest array of submillimeter detectors to date, utilizes a novel overlap-channel polyphase synthesis filter bank (OC-PSB) for the AC biasing of detectors, implemented on a cutting-edge Xilinx Radio Frequency System on Chip (RFSoC). This design departs from traditional waveform look-up-table(LUT) in memory, allowing real-time, dynamic signal generation, enhancing usable bandwidth and dynamic range, and enabling microwave kinetic inductance detector (MKID) tracking for future readout systems. Results show that the OC-PSB upholds critical performance metrics such as signal-to-noise ratio (SNR) while offering additional benefits such as scalability. This paper will discuss DSP design, RFSoC implementation, and laboratory performance, demonstrating OC-PSB’s potential in submillimeter-wave astronomy MKID readout systems.
The Fred Young Submillimeter Telescope (FYST), on Cerro Chajnantor in the Atacama desert of Chile, will conduct wide-field and small deep-field surveys of the sky with more than 100,000 detectors on the Prime-Cam instrument. Kinetic inductance detectors (KIDs) were chosen as the primary sensor technology for their high density focal plane packing. Additionally, they benefit from low cost, ease of fabrication, and simplified cryogenic readout, which are all beneficial for successful deployment at scale. The cryogenic multiplexing complexity is pulled out of the cryostat and is instead pushed into the digital signal processing of the room temperature electronics. Using the Xilinx Radio Frequency System on a Chip (RFSoC), a highly multiplexed KID readout was developed for the first light Prime-Cam and commissioning Mod-Cam instruments. We report on the performance of the RFSoC-based readout with multiple detector arrays in various cryogenic setups. Specifically we demonstrate detector noise limited performance of the RFSoC-based readout under the expected optical loading conditions.
Mod-Cam is a first light and commissioning instrument for the CCAT-prime project’s six-meter aperture Fred Young Submillimeter Telescope (FYST), currently under construction at 5600 m on Cerro Chajnantor in Chile’s Atacama Desert. Prime-Cam, a first-generation science instrument for FYST, will deliver over ten times greater mapping speed than current and near-term facilities for unprecedented 280–850 GHz broadband and spectroscopic measurements with microwave kinetic inductance detectors (MKIDs). CCAT-prime will address a suite of science goals, from Big Bang cosmology to star formation and galaxy evolution over cosmic time. Mod-Cam deployment on FYST with a 280 GHz instrument module containing MKID arrays is planned for early science observations in 2024. Mod-Cam will be used to test instrument modules for Prime-Cam, which can house up to seven instrument modules. We discuss the design and status of the 0.9 m diameter, 1.8 m long Mod-Cam receiver and 40 cm diameter 280 GHz instrument module, with cold stages at 40 K, 4 K, 1 K, and 100 mK. We also describe the instrument module’s cryogenic readout designs to enable the readout of more than 10,000 MKIDs across 18 networks.
KEYWORDS: Sensors, Resonators, Digital signal processing, Inductance, Data conversion, Multiplexing, Signal to noise ratio, Frequency combs, Signal attenuation
The Prime-Cam instrument on the Fred Young Submillimeter Telescope (FYST) is expected to be the largest deployment of millimeter and submillimeter sensitive kinetic inductance detectors to date. To read out these arrays efficiently, a microwave frequency multiplexed readout has been designed to run on the Xilinx Radio Frequency System on a Chip (RFSoC). The RFSoC has dramatically improved every category of size, weight, power, cost, and bandwidth over the previous generation readout systems. We describe a baseline firmware design which can read out four independent RF networks each with 500 MHz of bandwidth and 1000 detectors for ∼30 W. The overall readout architecture is a combination of hardware, gateware/firmware, software, and network design. The requirements of the readout are driven by the 850 GHz instrument module of the seven-module Prime-Cam instrument. These requirements along with other constraints which have led to critical design choices are highlighted. Preliminary measurements of the system phase noise and dynamic range are presented.
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