ORAU

High-Sensitivity Far-IR Detectors

ORAU Pasadena, CA

Organization

National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA)

Reference Code

0163-NPP-NOV24-JPL-Astrophys

How To Apply

All applications must be submitted in Zintellect

Please visit the NASA Postdoctoral Program website for application instructions and requirements: How to Apply | NASA Postdoctoral Program (orau.org)

A complete application to the NASA Postdoctoral Program includes:

  • Research proposal
  • Three letters of recommendation
  • Official doctoral transcript documents

Application Deadline

11/1/2024 6:00:59 PM Eastern Time Zone

Description

About the NASA Postdoctoral Program

The NASA Postdoctoral Program (NPP) offers unique research opportunities to highly-talented U.S. and non-U.S. scientists to engage in ongoing NASA research projects at a NASA Center, NASA Headquarters, or at a NASA-affiliated research institute. These one- to three-year fellowships are competitive and are designed to advance NASA’s missions in space science, Earth science, aeronautics, space operations, exploration systems, and astrobiology.

Description:

We are seeking one or more postdoctoral researchers with hands-on experience in low-temperature superconducting devices and far-IR to millimeter-wave instrumentation to join our team developing the world’s most sensitive far-infrared detectors. We are pursuing detector arrays in which each pixel provides background-limited performance in a dispersive spectrometer on a cryogenic space telescopes; that is a per-pixel noise equivalent power of 10^-19 W/sqrt(Hz) or lower. The researcher(s) will make use of a dilution-cooled sub-100mK cryostat to characterize devices built in the JPL micro devices lab (MDL). We are pursuing transition-edge-sensed (TES) bolometers, kinetic inductance detectors (KIDs), and quantum capacitance detectors (QCDs), with an initial emphasis on the bolometers in preparation for the SPICA mission. We will implement frequency-domain readout techniques developed by a range of US and international collaborators, and the candidate(s) should be willing to travel and interface with a diverse range of scientists and engineers in support of this activity. We envision that the thrust of the work will be in the low-NEP detector system demonstration, but opportunities also exist for collaboration on ongoing and proposed ground-based and balloon-borne instruments targeting the early Universe. Examples include SuperSpec (a millimeter-wave spectrometer on a chip slated for the large millimeter telescope targeting individual high-redshift galaxies ), TIME (a mm-wave tomographic intensity mapper targeting ionized carbon fro the Reionzation epoch), and TIM ((formerly STARFIRE), a proposed balloon-borne far-IR imaging spectrometer targeting the history of star formation when the Universe was half its current age). Key people in the JPL detector group include Pierre Echternach and Matt Kenyon

References:

C. M. Bradford, P. F. Goldsmith, A. Bolatto, L. Armus, J. Bauer, P. Appleton, A. Cooray, C. Casey, D. Dale, B. Uzgil, J. Aguirre, J. D. Smith, K. Sheth, E. J. Murphy, C. McKenney, W. Holmes, M. Rizzo, E. Bergin, and G. Stacey. A Cryogenic Space Telescope for Far-Infrared Astrophysics: A Vision for NASA in the 2020 Decade. ArXiv e-prints, May 2015.

P. M. Echternach, K. J. Stone, C. M. Bradford, P. K. Day, D. W. Wilson, K. G. Megerian, N. Llombart, and J. Bueno. Photon shot noise limited detection of terahertz radiation using a quantum capacitance detector. Applied Physics Letters, 103(5):053510, July 2013.

M. Kenyon, P.K Day, C.M. Bradford, J.J. Bock, and H.G. LeDuc. J. Low Temp. Physics, 151:112–118, January 2008.

A. D. Beyer, M. E. Kenyon, P. M. Echternach, B.-H. Eom, J. Bueno, P. K. Day, J. J. Bock, and C. M. Bradford. Characterizing SixNy absorbers and support beams for far- infrared/submillimeter transition-edge sensors. In Society of Photo-Optical Instrumentation Engineers (SPIE) Conference Series, volume 7741 of Society of Photo-Optical Instrumentation Engineers (SPIE) Conference Series, July 2010.

A“‹.“‹D“‹.“‹B“‹e“‹y“‹e“‹r“‹,“‹M“‹.“‹E“‹.“‹K“‹e“‹n“‹y“‹o“‹n“‹,“‹P“‹.“‹M“‹.“‹E“‹c“‹h“‹t“‹e“‹r“‹n“‹a“‹c“‹h“‹,“‹T“‹.“‹C“‹h“‹u“‹i“‹,“‹B“‹.“‹-“‹H“‹.“‹E“‹o“‹m,P.K.Day,J.J.Bock,W.A. Holmes, and C. M. Bradford. Ultra-sensitive Transition-Edge Sensors for the Background Limited Infrared/Sub-mm Spectrograph (BLISS). Journal of Low Temperature Physics, page 143, December 2011.

A. D. Beyer, P. M. Echternach, M. E. Kenyon, M. C. Runyan, B. Bumble, C. M. Bradford, J. J. Bock, and W. A. Holmes. E↵ect of mo/cu superconducting bilayer geometry on ultra- sensitive transition-edge sensor performance. IEEE Transactions on Applied Superconductivity, 23(3):2100104–2100104, June 2013.

J. Kuur, J. Beyer, M. Bruijn, J. R. Gao, R. Hartog, R. Heijmering, H. Hoevers, B. Jackson, B. J. Leeuwen, M. Lindeman, M. Kiviranta, P. Korte, P. Mauskopf, H. Weers, and S. Withing- ton. The spica-safari tes bolometer readout: Developments towards a flight system. Journal of Low Temperature Physics, 167(5):561–567, 2012.

L“‹.“‹G“‹o“‹t“‹t“‹a“‹r“‹d“‹i“‹,“‹J“‹.“‹v“‹a“‹n“‹d“‹e“‹K“‹u“‹u“‹r“‹,“‹S“‹.“‹B“‹a“‹n“‹d“‹l“‹e“‹r“‹,“‹M“‹.“‹B“‹r“‹u“‹i“‹j“‹n“‹,“‹P“‹.“‹d“‹e“‹K“‹o“‹r“‹t“‹e,J.R.Gao,R.denHartog,R.A. Hijmering, H. Hoevers, P. Koshropanah, C. Kilbourne, M. A. Lindemann, M. Parra Borderias, and M. Ridder. Ac read-out circuits for single pixel characterization of tes microcalorimeters and bolometers. IEEE Transactions on Applied Superconductivity, 21(3):272–275, June 2011.

R. Hartog, M. D. Audley, J. Beyer, D. Boersma, M. Bruijn, L. Gottardi, H. Hoevers, R. Hou, G. Keizer, P. Khosropanah, M. Kiviranta, P. Korte, J. Kuur, B.-J. Leeuwen, A. C. T. Nieuwen- huizen, and P. Winden. Low-noise readout of tes detectors with baseband feedback frequency domain multiplexing. Journal of Low Temperature Physics, 167(5):652–657, 2012.

R. A. Hijmering, R. H. den Hartog, A. J. van der Linden, M. Ridder, M. P. Bruijn, J. van der Kuur, B. J. van Leeuwen, P. van Winden, and B. Jackson. The 160 tes bolometer read-out using fdm for safari, 2014.

Wheeler, J.; Hailey-Dunsheath, S.; Shirokoff, E.; Barry, P. S.; Bradford, C. M.; Chapman, S.; Che, G.; Glenn, J.; Hollister, M.; Kovács, A.; LeDuc, H. G.; Mauskopf, P.; McGeehan, R.; McKenney, C. M.; O''Brient, R.; Padin, S.; Reck, T.; Ross, C.; Shiu, C.; Tucker, C. E.; Williamson, R.; Zmuidzinas, J. SuperSpec: development towards a full-scale filter bank. Proceedings of the SPIE, V. 9914, 99143K9. 2016

Location:

Jet Propulsion Laboratory

Pasadena, California

Field of Science:Astrophysics

Advisors:

Matt Bradford

matt.bradford@jpl.nasa.gov

818.726.8622

Applications with citizens from Designated Countries will not be accepted at this time, unless they are Legal Permanent Residents of the United States. A complete list of Designated Countries can be found at: https://www.nasa.gov/oiir/export-control.

Eligibility is currently open to:

  • U.S. Citizens;
  • U.S. Lawful Permanent Residents (LPR);
  • Foreign Nationals eligible for an Exchange Visitor J-1 visa status; and,
  • Applicants for LPR, asylees, or refugees in the U.S. at the time of application with 1) a valid EAD card and 2) I-485 or I-589 forms in pending status

Questions about this opportunity? Please email npp@orau.org

Eligibility Requirements

  • Degree: Doctoral Degree.
  • Seniority level

    Internship
  • Employment type

    Full-time
  • Job function

    Other
  • Industries

    Government Administration

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