Attending: Tom, Joy, Brian, Shaul, Karl, Qi, Toki, Jeff, Julian, Al, Jacques
Notes by : Karl
No telecon next week (TeamX meeting)
Preparations for TeamX (JPL + UMN, led by Brian/Amy)
Cosmic Rays (Jeff Filippini) B-mode from Space slides
first 2-3 slides are intro to problem. Rest are data from SPIDER
Antarctic balloons good approximation of space at L2
impact rate set by area, deposition energy set by thickness.
Planck issue was wafer hits. long time constant (seconds) and high rate (few Hz)
new space mission, wafers hit at 100 Hz. need short time constants. need bolometers unresponsive to cosmic ray hits on wafers.
if crosstalk of cosmic ray hits is nonlinear. Could be issues. increases the effective rate.
consider hits to readout electronics as well. LC resonators could shift. SQUIDs respond. etc.
Shaul: anyone planning to test this? like the phonon down-conversion?
SPIDER data. low coincidence rate, so no long distance propogation across wafer.
in lab tests see ~ 8 ms time constants. See saturated TES at high energies.
saw 'step' glitches. example of a weird thing. steps of 1 flux quantum. Large cosmic ray causes SQUID to lose lock on rising edge. Specific to TDM. Can be avoided in design.
Jeff: No evidence for bolometer response to cosmic rays hitting wafer. Good sign, likely to avoid Planck's problem.
Shaul: what are 1st priorities to look for in EBEX data?
Shaul: Why does SPIDER see no long glitches?
Shaul: 100 mK measurements would be nice. Really show the problem or not.
GRASP (Brad)
Focal plane model, V3.0 (Young)
Focal plane with pixels and hexagonal wafers is laid out.
New sensitivity is 0.62 uK arcmin.
Version posted on wiki.
Toki: are all arrays < 150 mm wafer? Karl: yes.