“…To date, the most sensitive detectors for electromagnetic radiation are based on superconducting materials and exploit local photoinduced heating across their strongly temperature dependent superconducting transition. − To maximize the temperature increase due to absorbed radiation, the key requirements for such materials are an ultralow electronic heat capacity ( C e ), which is typically achieved using nanostructured thin films, as well as a good thermal isolation and ultralow thermal conductance ( G th ) to its surroundings . Possessing both of these attributes, graphene has recently attracted formidable attention. − While not an intrinsic superconductor, it can be placed in the proximity of superconducting electrodes to form Josephson junctions and as such be successfully used as a GHz bolometer , and mid-IR single-photon detector. , Furthermore, the recently discovered moiré material, magic-angle twisted bilayer graphene (MATBG) was shown to have an intrinsic, gate tunable superconducting phase with a record-low carrier density ( n ) of <10 11 cm –2 and C e < 100 k B , , where k B is the Boltzmann constant.…”