Strong negative electrothermal feedback in thermal kinetic inductance detectors

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Abstract

We demonstrate strong negative electrothermal feedback accelerating and linearizing the response of a thermal kinetic inductance detector (TKID). TKIDs are a proposed highly multiplexable replacement to transition-edge sensors and measure power through the temperature-dependent resonant frequency of a superconducting microresonator bolometer. At high readout probe power and probe frequency detuned from the TKID resonant frequency, we observe electrothermal feedback loop gain up to L ≈ 16 through measuring the reduction of settling time. We also show that the detector response has no detectable non-linearity over a 38% range of incident power and that the noise-equivalent power is below the design photon noise.

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Agrawal, S., Steinbach, B., Bock, J. J., Frez, C., Minutolo, L., Nguyen, H., … Wandui, A. (2021). Strong negative electrothermal feedback in thermal kinetic inductance detectors. Journal of Applied Physics, 130(12). https://doi.org/10.1063/5.0064723

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