Title :
The Front-End Electronics and the Data Acquisition System for a Kinetic Inductance Detector
Author :
Capasso, L. ; Branchini, P. ; Budano, A. ; Marchetti, D.
Author_Institution :
Sect. “Roma Tre”, Ist. Naz. di Fis. Nucl. (INFN), Rome, Italy
Abstract :
The Data Acquisition System (DAQ) and the Front-End electronics for an array of Kinetic Inductance Detectors (KIDs) are described. KIDs are superconductive detectors, in which electrons are organized in Cooper pairs. Any incident radiation could break a pair generating a couple of quasi-particles that increase the inductance of the detector. The DAQ system we developed is a hardware/software co-design, based on state machines and on a microprocessor embedded into an FPGA. A commercial DAC/ADC board is used to interface the FPGA to the array of KIDs. The DAQ system generates a Stimulus signal suitable for an array of up to 128 KIDs. Such signal is up-mixed with a 3 GHz carrier wave and it then excites the KIDs array. The read-out signal from the detector is down-mixed with respect to the 3 GHz sine wave and recovered Stimulus is read back by the ADC device. The microprocessor stores read out data via a PCI express bus (PCIe) into an external disk. It also computes the Fast Fourier Transform of the acquired read out signal: this allows extrapolating which KID interacted and the energy of the impinging radiation. Simulations and tests have been performed successfully and experimental results are presented.
Keywords :
data acquisition; fast Fourier transforms; field programmable gate arrays; high energy physics instrumentation computing; microcomputers; nuclear electronics; readout electronics; Cooper pairs; DAC-ADC devices; DAQ system; FPGA; KID; PCI express bus; Stimulus signal; data acquisition system; fast Fourier transform; frequency 3 GHz; front-end electronics; hardware-software codesign; impinging radiation; incident radiation; kinetic inductance detector; microprocessor; quasiparticles; readout data; readout signal; sine wave; superconductive detectors; Arrays; Data acquisition; Detectors; Field programmable gate arrays; Inductance; Kinetic theory; Resonant frequency; Detector instrumentation; FPGAs; digital signal processing; real time systems; superconducting radiation detectors;
Journal_Title :
Nuclear Science, IEEE Transactions on
DOI :
10.1109/TNS.2015.2432853