Superconducting kinetic inductance radiometer

1989 
A bolometer that is based on a differential thermometer that senses temperature changes through changes in the kinetic inductance of a superconducting thin film is being developed. The temperature transducer is an inductance bridge patterned as an integrated circuit on a 1-cm/sup 2/ Si substrate. Two inductors from opposite arms of the bridge are patterned on a 2-mm/sup 2/ thermally isolated Si island which is supported by a 9- mu m thick Si:B membrane. The bridge is excited with audio-frequency current, and the bridge imbalance is detected with a commercial DC SQUID amplifier. The bridge is balanced by applying power to the thermally isolated island. This thermometer is the sensor for a prototype radiometer that will provide an absolute measure of IR power. The radiometer, which is designed for a NEP of about 10/sup -11/ W/ square root Hz, is intended to measure the spectrally dispersed power of a 300-K black body. This absolute radiometer is being developed for use at the Low Background Infrared (LBIR) Facility at NIST, Gaithersburg, MD. The noise floor of the temperature transducer for the radiometer has been measured to be 0.7 pW for a 100-s integration time. This is approximately 150 times lower noise than that of the commercial absolute radiometer currently used at the LBIR facility.
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