7–10 Nov 2023
SLAC
America/Los_Angeles timezone

The Quantum Capacitor Detector – counting single photons in the far-infrared

7 Nov 2023, 18:00
2h
B53 Lobby (SLAC)

B53 Lobby

SLAC

Speaker

Pierre Echternach (Jet Propulsion Laboratory)

Description

The Quantum Capacitance Detector (QCD) is a high-sensitivity direct detector under development for low background applications such as far-infrared spectroscopy from a cold space telescope. The QCD has demonstrated an optically-measured noise equivalent power of 2x10-20 W⋅Hz-1/2 at 1.5 THz, making it among the most sensitive far-infrared (IR) detectors systems ever demonstrated. It has demonstrated the ability to count single far-infrared photons in single pixel and large array formats. As such, The QCD is an excellent candidate as the detector of choice for applications such as search for hidden sector dark matter and dark energy radiation. A brief overview of the operating principle and current status will be given.

Primary authors

Pierre Echternach (Jet Propulsion Laboratory) Aaron Chou (Fermilab) Andrew Beyer (Jet Propulsion Laboratory) Sven van Berkel (Jet Propulsion Laboratory) Charles Bradford (Jet Propulsion Laboratory) Matthew Shaw (Jet Propulsion Laboratory)

Presentation materials

There are no materials yet.