Dual-Resonator Kinetic-Inductance Detector for Distinction between Signal and 1/f Frequency Noise
N. Foroozani, B. Sarabi, S. H. Moseley, T. Stevenson, E. J. Wollack,, O. Noroozian, K. D. Osborn

TL;DR
This paper introduces a Dual-Resonator KID (DuRKID) designed to distinguish between photon signals and 1/f frequency noise caused by TLS defects, aiming to improve detector performance in astronomy.
Contribution
The paper presents the design, fabrication, and theoretical analysis of a novel DuRKID that leverages mode hybridization to separate signal from 1/f noise, enhancing KID sensitivity.
Findings
Demonstrated mode hybridization and tuning in fabricated DuRKID
Characterized interresonator coupling and transmission line interactions
Simulated significant performance advantage over traditional KIDs
Abstract
Astronomical Kinetic Inductance Detectors (KIDs), similar to quantum information devices, experience performance limiting noise from materials. In particular, 1/f (frequency) noise can be a dominant noise mechanism, which arises from Two-Level System defects (TLSs) in the circuit dielectrics and material interfaces. Here we present a Dual-Resonator KID (DuRKID), which is designed for improved signal to noise (or noise equivalent power) relative to 1/f-noise limited KIDs. We first show the DuRKID schematic, fabricated circuit, and we follow with a description of the intended operation, first measurements, theory, and discussion. The circuit consists of two superconducting resonators sharing an electrical capacitance bridge of 4 capacitors, each of which hosts TLSs. The device is intended to operate using hybridization of the modes, which causes TLSs to either couple to one mode or the…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAdvanced Electrical Measurement Techniques · Advanced Frequency and Time Standards · Mechanical and Optical Resonators
