Working principle and demonstrator of microwave-multiplexing for the HOLMES experiment microcalorimeters
D.T. Becker, D.A. Bennett, M. Biasotti, M. Borghesi, V. Ceriale, M. De, Gerone, M. Faverzani, E. Ferri, J.W. Fowler, G. Gallucci, J.D. Gard, A., Giachero, J.P. Hays-Wehle, G.C. Hilton, J.A.B Mates, A. Nucciotti, A., Orlando, G. Pessina, A. Puiu, C.D. Reintsema, D.R. Schmidt

TL;DR
This paper presents a microwave-multiplexing technique for reading out large arrays of microcalorimeters in the HOLMES neutrino mass experiment, enabling scalable, efficient, and low-cost sensor readout.
Contribution
It introduces a novel microwave-multiplexing approach using superconducting resonators and RF SQUIDs, demonstrating its design, implementation, and scalability for HOLMES.
Findings
Successful development of a two-channel readout prototype
Performance validation with HOLMES-specific TES detectors
Scalability to 1024 pixels explained
Abstract
The determination of the neutrino mass is an open issue in modern particle physics and astrophysics. The direct mass measurement is the only theory-unrelated experimental tool capable to probe such quantity. The HOLMES experiment aims to measure the end-point energy of the electron capture (EC) decay of Ho with a statistical sensitivity on the neutrino mass as low as eV/c. In order to acquire the large needed statistics, by keeping the pile-up contribution as low as possible, 1024 transition edge sensors (TESs) with high energy and time resolutions will be employed. Microcalorimeter and bolometer arrays based on transition edge sensor with thousands of pixels are under development for several space-based and ground-based applications, including astrophysics, nuclear and particle physics, and materials science. The common necessary challenge is to develop pratical…
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