The Prime-Cam instrument on the Fred Young Submillimeter Telescope (FYST) is expected to be the largest deployment of millimeter and submillimeter sensitive kinetic inductance detectors to date. To read out these arrays efficiently, a microwave frequency multiplexed readout has been designed to run on the Xilinx Radio Frequency System on a Chip (RFSoC). The RFSoC has dramatically improved every category of size, weight, power, cost, and bandwidth over the previous generation readout systems. We describe a baseline firmware design which can read out four independent RF networks each with 500 MHz of bandwidth and 1000 detectors for ∼30 W. The overall readout architecture is a combination of hardware, gateware/firmware, software, and network design. The requirements of the readout are driven by the 850 GHz instrument module of the 7-module Prime-Cam instrument. These requirements along with other constraints which have led to critical design choices are highlighted. Preliminary measurements of the system phase noise and dynamic range are presented.
A simple model for a fair ‘three-sided coin’ is proposed and tested. Describing the coin as a cylinder with a given height and basis radius, this model efficiently characterizes the problem, constraining the size of the coin. A statistical analysis of the data collected from actual realizations of such coins has been performed, supporting the proposed model. Besides studying the case of a fair three-sided coin, this work represents a model for an explicit application of the scientific method, in which all parts (problem characterization, statement of a hypothesis, experiment, analysis, description, conclusions) have clearly directed its development. Thus, it represents an useful illustration of such method for undergraduate students.
Prime-Cam is a first-generation instrument for the Cerro Chajnantor Atacama Telescope-prime (CCAT-prime) Facility. The 850 GHz module for Prime-Cam will probe the highest frequency of all the instrument modules. We describe the parameter space of the 850 GHz optical system between the Fλ spacing, beam size, pixel sensitivity, and detector count. We present the optimization of an optical design for the 850 GHz instrument module for CCAT-prime. We further describe the development of the cryogenic RF chain design to accommodate >30 readout lines to read 41,400 kinetic inductance detectors (KIDs) within the cryogenic testbed.
The Fred Young Submillimeter Telescope (FYST) at the Cerro-Chajnantor Atacama Telescope prime (CCATprime) Facility will host Prime-Cam as a powerful, first generation camera with imaging polarimeters working at several wavelengths and spectroscopic instruments aimed at intensity mapping during the Epoch of Reionization.Here we introduce the 850 GHz (350 micron) instrument module. This will be the highest frequency module in Prime-Cam and the most novel for astronomical and cosmological surveys, taking full advantage of the atmospheric transparency at the high 5600 meter CCAT-prime siting on Cerro Chajnantor. The 850 GHz module will deploy ∼40,000 Kinetic Inductance Detectors (KIDs) with Silicon platelet feedhorn coupling (both fabricated at NIST), and will provide unprecedented broadband intensity and polarization measurement capabilities. The 850 GHz module will be key to addressing pressing astrophysical questions regarding galaxy formation, Big Bang cosmology, and star formation within our own Galaxy. We present the motivation and overall design for the module, and initial laboratory characterization.
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