A Wideband, Low-Noise Superconducting Amplifier with High Dynamic Range
Byeong Ho Eom, Peter K. Day, Henry G. Leduc, Jonas Zmuidzinas

TL;DR
This paper presents a superconducting parametric amplifier with broad bandwidth, low noise near the quantum limit, and high dynamic range, suitable for various microwave frequency applications.
Contribution
It introduces a simple superconducting amplifier based on kinetic inductance that achieves wide bandwidth, low noise, and high dynamic range simultaneously.
Findings
Gain extends over 2 GHz on either side of 11.56 GHz pump
Added noise is limited to 3.4 photons at 9.4 GHz
Dynamic range comparable to microwave transistor amplifiers
Abstract
Amplifiers are ubiquitous in electronics and play a fundamental role in a wide range of scientific measurements. From a user's perspective, an ideal amplifier has very low noise, operates over a broad frequency range, and has a high dynamic range - it is capable of handling strong signals with little distortion. Unfortunately, it is difficult to obtain all of these characteristics simultaneously. For example, modern transistor amplifiers offer multi-octave bandwidths and excellent dynamic range. However, their noise remains far above the fundamental limit set by the uncertainty principle of quantum mechanics. Parametric amplifiers, which predate transistor amplifiers and are widely used in optics, exploit a nonlinear response to transfer power from a strong pump tone to a weak signal. If the nonlinearity is purely reactive, ie. nondissipative, in theory the amplifier noise can reach the…
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