Optimization of lenslet arrays for PRIMA Kinetic Inductance Detectors
Sumit Dahal, Thomas R. Stevenson, Nicholas P. Costen, Nat DeNigris, Jason Glenn, Gang Hu, Christine A. Jhabvala, Ricardo Morales-Sanchez, Jessica B. Patel, Manuel A. Quijada, Ian Schrock, Frederick H. Wang, Edward J. Wollack

TL;DR
This paper details the design, fabrication, and testing of optimized monolithic silicon lenslet arrays with anti-reflection coatings for the PRIMA space telescope's FIR instrument, enhancing detector coupling efficiency.
Contribution
It introduces a novel fabrication process for lenslet arrays with AR coatings and bonding techniques tailored for space-based FIR detectors.
Findings
High transmission efficiency achieved across broad wavelength ranges.
Successful fabrication and alignment of monolithic lenslet arrays.
Effective AR coatings and bonding methods demonstrated.
Abstract
The PRobe far-Infrared Mission for Astrophysics (PRIMA) is a cryogenically cooled 1.8-m space telescope designed to address fundamental questions about the evolution of galactic ecosystems, the origins of planetary atmospheres, and the buildup of dust and metals over cosmic time. PRIMA will achieve unprecedented sensitivity in the 24 - 261 m wavelength range, enabled by background-limited kinetic inductance detectors (KIDs) cooled to 120 mK. For PRIMA's Far-InfraRed Enhanced Survey Spectrometer (FIRESS) instrument, we have developed monolithic kilopixel silicon lenslet arrays to efficiently couple incident radiation from the telescope's fore-optics onto the KID absorber elements. These three-dimensional lenslet arrays are fabricated using grayscale lithography, followed by deep reactive ion etching (DRIE), and are anti-reflection (AR) coated with a quarter-wavelength thick…
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Taxonomy
TopicsSuperconducting and THz Device Technology · Adaptive optics and wavefront sensing · Thermal Radiation and Cooling Technologies
