4.2 Article Proceedings Paper

Kinetic inductance phonon sensors for the cryogenic dark matter search experiment

Journal

JOURNAL OF LOW TEMPERATURE PHYSICS
Volume 151, Issue 1-2, Pages 544-549

Publisher

SPRINGER/PLENUM PUBLISHERS
DOI: 10.1007/s10909-007-9689-y

Keywords

dark matter; kinetic inductance sensors; phonon mediated; superconducting detectors; semiconductor detector

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An important challenge faced by phonon-mediated detectors for the next generation of dark matter detectors (> 100 kg) is to instrument large target mass at low cost, while maintaining the large background suppression offered by the combination of phonons and ionization (or scintillation) measurement. Kinetic inductance phonon sensors, operating far below the superconducting transition temperature, offer an interesting solution to this scaling problem. They do not critically depend on the uniformity of T (c) and their resonant-cavity readout is easy to multiplex. We are studying a microstrip (two parallel planes) transmission line architecture that may offer the additional advantage of a separation of functions: the main detector is just covered by an unpatterned aluminum film and the number of quasi-particles created in it by athermal phonons are sensed by a second film, which has been independently patterned and is mounted a few microns away from the detector. We present current results on the responsivity and noise of large area (similar to 33 mm(2)) microstrip kinetic inductance phonon sensors.

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