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Published November 2020 | public
Journal Article

Quantum Limited SIS Receiver Technology for the Detection of Water Isotopologue Emission From Comets

Abstract

NASA's Planetary Science Decadal Survey has concluded that isotopic measurements of cometary water vapor are a means to unraveling the mysteries involving the origin of Earth's water and the evolution of our solar system. To support this, a recent Jet Propulsion Laboratory internal research program has developed quantum limited superconductor-insulator-superconductor (SIS) receivers in the important 500-600 GHz submillimeter frequency band. These instruments can be used to detect the deuterated water (HDO) ground state (1₁₀ -1₀₁), H₂¹⁶O ortho ground state (1₁₀ -1₀₁), and the oxygen isotopologues H₂¹⁷O and H₂¹⁸O with exquisite sensitivity. To achieve the presented results, we have investigated aluminum oxide (AlO_x) and aluminum nitride (AlN_x) barrier SIS tunnel junction mixers on the 6-μm silicon-on-insulator substrate. The AlO_x and AlN_x junction mixer blocks utilize diagonal and smooth-profile conical horns, respectively. In both cases, a commercial 4-8-GHz intermediate frequency low-noise amplifier (LNA) has been integrated into the mixer block. The AlO_x (low-current-density) barrier SIS junctions were fabricated with 2-μm gold beam-lead technology, whereas in the case of the AlN_x SIS tunnel junction, we use capacitive RF decoupling tabs. The latter approach simplifies fabrication, increases yield, eases the mounting process, and facilitates scaling to higher frequencies. For an actual flight mission, with operation ≤4.2 K, the allowed heat dissipation of the mixer-integrated LNA needs to be minimized. In this article, we also investigate the receiver sensitivity as a function of the LNA dc power consumption. We find that the dc power consumption of the LNA can be reduced to ~1.6 mW with minimal loss in sensitivity. It is anticipated that the continued InP HEMT development for quantum computer applications are likely to reduce the required LNA power dissipation even further.

Additional Information

© 2020 IEEE. Manuscript received February 21, 2020; revisedMay 19, 2020; accepted July 10, 2020. Date of publication July 17, 2020; date of current version November 3, 2020. The authors would like to thank J. Siles for providing the JPL build local oscillator, and F. Rice of Caltech for helpful Supermix discussions. The authors would also like to thank M. Gould at Zen Machine & Scientific Instrument for advice and expert mechanical assistance, and N.Wadefalk of the LowNoise Factory (LNF) for useful LNA discussion and feedback. The research described herein was carried out at the Jet Propulsion Laboratory, California Institute of Technology, USA, under contract with the National Aeronautics and Space Administration.

Additional details

Created:
August 20, 2023
Modified:
October 23, 2023