Magnetic field dependence of the internal quality factor and noise performance of lumped-element kinetic inductance detectors
Daniel Flanigan, Bradley R. Johnson, Maximilian H. Abitbol, Sean, Bryan, Robin Cantor, Peter K. Day, Glenn Jones, Philip Mauskopf, Heather, McCarrick, Amber Miller, and Jonas Zmuidzinas

TL;DR
This study demonstrates that controlling ambient magnetic fields during the transition of thin-film aluminum in KIDs can enhance their internal quality factor without increasing noise, improving detector performance.
Contribution
We introduce a magnetic field nulling technique during fabrication to improve the internal quality factor of aluminum-based KIDs, addressing vortex trapping issues.
Findings
Magnetic field control during transition affects quality factor.
No additional noise observed with vortex trapping.
Magnetic shielding influences vortex formation.
Abstract
We present a technique for increasing the internal quality factor of kinetic inductance detectors (KIDs) by nulling ambient magnetic fields with a properly applied magnetic field. The KIDs used in this study are made from thin-film aluminum, they are mounted inside a light-tight package made from bulk aluminum, and they are operated near . Since the thin-film aluminum has a slightly elevated critical temperature (), it therefore transitions before the package (), which also serves as a magnetic shield. On cooldown, ambient magnetic fields as small as approximately can produce vortices in the thin-film aluminum as it transitions because the bulk aluminum package has not yet transitioned and therefore is not yet shielding. These vortices become trapped inside the aluminum package…
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