Characterization of a Two-Channel Optical and Near-infrared Transition Edge Sensor System for Rare-Event Searches
Manuel Meyer, Katharina-Sophie Isleif, Friederike Januschek, Axel Lindner, Gulden Othman, Elmeri Rivasto, Jose Alejandro Rubiera Gimeno, Christina Schwemmbauer

TL;DR
This paper presents a detailed characterization of a two-channel optical and near-infrared transition edge sensor system optimized for rare-event searches, demonstrating high efficiency, good energy resolution, and low background noise.
Contribution
The study introduces a two-channel TES detector module optimized for 1064nm photons, with improved detection efficiency and background suppression for rare-event physics applications.
Findings
Achieved 86% system detection efficiency at 1064nm.
Energy resolution better than 7%.
Background dark-count rate below 6mHz.
Abstract
Transition edge sensors (TESs) are superconducting energy-resolving microcalorimeters that have demonstrated low background rates as well as quantum efficiencies close to unity for photons at optical and near-infrared wavelengths. This makes these detectors well suited for rare-event searches. We report on the comprehensive characterization of a two-channel detector module consisting of two tungsten TESs optimized for the detection of photons with a wavelength of 1064nm. The devices achieve a system detection efficiency of %, an energy resolution better than 7%, and a background dark-count rate of photon-like events below 6mHz when coupled to an optical fiber. Using an unbinned likelihood framework, we find the dark count rate to be compatible with blackbody radiation from the room-temperature laboratory environment. Thanks to the energy resolution of the TESs, we show that it…
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