Calibration of Transition-edge Sensor (TES) Bolometer Arrays with Application to CLASS

Author:

Appel John W.ORCID,Bennett Charles L.ORCID,Brewer Michael K.,Bustos RicardoORCID,Chan ManweiORCID,Chuss David T.ORCID,Cleary JosephORCID,Couto Jullianna D.ORCID,Dahal SumitORCID,Datta RahulORCID,Denis KevinORCID,Eimer JosephORCID,Essinger-Hileman ThomasORCID,Harrington KathleenORCID,Iuliano JeffreyORCID,Li YunyangORCID,Marriage Tobias A.ORCID,Núñez CarolinaORCID,Osumi KeisukeORCID,Padilla Ivan L.ORCID,Petroff Matthew A.ORCID,Rostem KarwanORCID,Valle Deniz A. N.ORCID,Watts Duncan J.ORCID,Weiland Janet L.ORCID,Wollack Edward J.ORCID,Xu ZhileiORCID

Abstract

Abstract The current and future cosmic microwave background (CMB) experiments fielding kilopixel arrays of transition-edge sensor (TES) bolometers require accurate and robust gain calibration methods. We simplify and refactor the standard TES model to directly relate the detector responsivity calibration and optical time constant to the measured TES current I and the applied bias current I b. The calibration method developed for the Cosmology Large Angular Scale Surveyor (CLASS) TES bolometer arrays relies on current versus voltage (IV) measurements acquired daily prior to CMB observations. By binning Q-band (40 GHz) IV measurements by optical loading, we find that the gain calibration median standard error within a bin is 0.3%. We test the accuracy of this IV bin detector calibration method by using the Moon as a photometric standard. The ratio of measured Moon amplitudes between the detector pairs sharing the same feedhorn indicates a TES calibration error of 0.5%. We also find that, for the CLASS Q-band TES array, calibrating the response of individual detectors based solely on the applied TES bias current accurately corrects TES gain variations across time but introduces a bias in the TES calibration from data counts to power units. Since the TES current bias value is set and recorded before every observation, this calibration method can always be applied to the raw TES data and is not subject to IV data quality or processing errors.

Funder

National Science Foundation Division of Astronomical Sciences

Publisher

American Astronomical Society

Subject

Space and Planetary Science,Astronomy and Astrophysics

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