Spaceborne low-noise single-photon detection for satellite-based quantum communications
Meng Yang, Feihu Xu, Ji-Gang Ren, Juan Yin, Yang Li, Yuan Cao, Qi, Shen, Hai-Lin Yong, Liang Zhang, Sheng-Kai Liao, Jian-Wei Pan, Cheng-Zhi, Peng

TL;DR
This paper reports the development and successful deployment of spaceborne, low-noise, high-reliability single-photon detectors based on commercial silicon APDs, enabling advanced quantum communication and space research applications.
Contribution
It introduces a novel spaceborne SPD design with enhanced radiation shielding and cooling, significantly reducing noise and increasing reliability over long-term space missions.
Findings
Dark count rate reduced from ~219 cps/day to ~0.76 cps/day
SPD maintained below 1000 cps over 1029 days in orbit
Photon detection efficiency exceeded 45%
Abstract
Single-photon detectors (SPDs) play important roles in highly sensitive detection applications, such as fluorescence spectroscopy, remote sensing and ranging, deep space optical communications, elementary particle detection, and quantum communications. However, the adverse conditions in space, such as the increased radiation flux and thermal vacuum, severely limit their noise performances, reliability, and lifetime. Herein, we present the first example of spaceborne, low-noise, high reliability SPDs, based on commercial off-the-shelf (COTS) silicon avalanche photodiodes (APD). Based on the high noise-radiation sensitivity of silicon APD, we have developed special shielding structures, multistage cooling technologies, and configurable driver electronics that significantly improved the COTS APD reliability and mitigated the SPD noise-radiation sensitivity. This led to a reduction of the…
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