데이터셋 상세
미국
Differential Measurements of an AC Source with a Josephson Arbitrary Waveform Synthesizer
The abstract of the paper [1] is:This paper describes differential sampling measurements of an ac source and a Josephson arbitrary waveform synthesizer (JAWS).A new iterative approach for aligning the phases of the JAWS and the source waveforms was implemented to minimize the differential voltage at the digitizer. A type-A uncertainty of 45 nV/V after 10 min was measured for a commercial ac source at 1 V rms amplitude and 1 kHz.[1] "Differential Measurements of an AC Source with a Josephson Arbitrary Waveform Synthesizer"submitted to Conference on Precision Electromagnetic Measurements (CPEM) 2024; will be published and available on IEEE website at a later date.Data for figures 2 to 4 of the manuscript.Files included in this publication: Fig 2 FFT of the digitizer signal.csv Figure 2 Fig. 2. 1 kHz component of the FFT of the digitizer signal (amplitude and phase) for Delta_V1=Source-JAWS1 and Delta_V2=Source-JAWS2 over 3.5 hours Five columns: The first column is the time (x-axis), the second column is the amplitude in volt of the first measured difference voltage (shown as black solid circle in Fig. 2), the third column is the phase in degree of the first measured difference voltage (shown as black open circle in Fig. 2), the fourth column is the amplitude in volt of the second measured difference voltage (shown as red solid circle in Fig. 2), the fifth column is the phase in degree of the second measured difference voltage (shown as red open circle in Fig. 2). Format: CSV Fig 3 Source rms amplitude and environment data.csv Figure 3 Fig. 3. Room environment conditions recorded (temperature, atmospheric pressure, and relative humidity) and Reconstructed rms amplitude for the source at 1 kHz. Five columns: The first column is the time (x-axis), the second column is the reconstructed amplitude in volt - 1 V (shown as blue solid circle in Fig. 3 bottom), the third column is the temperature in degree C (shown as orange solid square in Fig. 3 top), the fourth column is the atomsepheric pressure in hecto Pascal (shown as green open triangle in Fig. 3 top), the fifth column is the relative humidity in percent (shown as puple open circle in Fig. 2). Format: CSV Fig 4 Allan variance.csv Figure 4 Fig. 4. Allan deviation of the source amplitude measured at 1 V and 1 kHz. Five columns: The first column is the time (x-axis), the second column is the calculated Allan Deviation in volt (shown as blue solid circle in Fig. 4), the third column is the fit on the results, representing the white noise with slope -0.5 (shown as black dash line in Fig. 4), the fourth column is the is the time (x-axis) for the 1/f noise floor plot and the fifth column is the 1/f noise floor (shown as a black solid line in Fig. 4) Format: CSV
연관 데이터
Differential Measurements of an AC Source with a Josephson Arbitrary Waveform Synthesizer
공공데이터포털
The abstract of the paper [1] is:This paper describes differential sampling measurements of an ac source and a Josephson arbitrary waveform synthesizer (JAWS).A new iterative approach for aligning the phases of the JAWS and the source waveforms was implemented to minimize the differential voltage at the digitizer. A type-A uncertainty of 45 nV/V after 10 min was measured for a commercial ac source at 1 V rms amplitude and 1 kHz.[1] "Differential Measurements of an AC Source with a Josephson Arbitrary Waveform Synthesizer"submitted to Conference on Precision Electromagnetic Measurements (CPEM) 2024; will be published and available on IEEE website at a later date.Data for figures 2 to 4 of the manuscript.Files included in this publication: Fig 2 FFT of the digitizer signal.csv Figure 2 Fig. 2. 1 kHz component of the FFT of the digitizer signal (amplitude and phase) for Delta_V1=Source-JAWS1 and Delta_V2=Source-JAWS2 over 3.5 hours Five columns: The first column is the time (x-axis), the second column is the amplitude in volt of the first measured difference voltage (shown as black solid circle in Fig. 2), the third column is the phase in degree of the first measured difference voltage (shown as black open circle in Fig. 2), the fourth column is the amplitude in volt of the second measured difference voltage (shown as red solid circle in Fig. 2), the fifth column is the phase in degree of the second measured difference voltage (shown as red open circle in Fig. 2). Format: CSV Fig 3 Source rms amplitude and environment data.csv Figure 3 Fig. 3. Room environment conditions recorded (temperature, atmospheric pressure, and relative humidity) and Reconstructed rms amplitude for the source at 1 kHz. Five columns: The first column is the time (x-axis), the second column is the reconstructed amplitude in volt - 1 V (shown as blue solid circle in Fig. 3 bottom), the third column is the temperature in degree C (shown as orange solid square in Fig. 3 top), the fourth column is the atomsepheric pressure in hecto Pascal (shown as green open triangle in Fig. 3 top), the fifth column is the relative humidity in percent (shown as puple open circle in Fig. 2). Format: CSV Fig 4 Allan variance.csv Figure 4 Fig. 4. Allan deviation of the source amplitude measured at 1 V and 1 kHz. Five columns: The first column is the time (x-axis), the second column is the calculated Allan Deviation in volt (shown as blue solid circle in Fig. 4), the third column is the fit on the results, representing the white noise with slope -0.5 (shown as black dash line in Fig. 4), the fourth column is the is the time (x-axis) for the 1/f noise floor plot and the fifth column is the 1/f noise floor (shown as a black solid line in Fig. 4) Format: CSV
Pulse Patterns for the Josephson Arbitrary Waveform Synthesizer, CPEM 2024 abstract
공공데이터포털
Delta-sigma algorithms are used to determine the desired sequence of quantum-based voltage pulses used by the Josephson Arbitrary Waveform Synthesizer (JAWS) to create calculable voltage waveforms. This data set contains a comparison (Fig 1. of the CPEM 2024 abstract) of a 1 kHz pulse pattern with rms amplitude of 2 mV without post-processing and with post-processing which modifies the problematic pulse pattern to remove incorrect pulses at the 0.75 ms pattern wrap point. In the time-domain, the pulse patterns are low-pass filtered at 30 MHz and the residuals relative to the 1 kHz ac signal are also shown. This data set also contains spectra which show the pulse patterns' voltage relative to the fundamental in the frequency domain.
Pulse Patterns for the Josephson Arbitrary Waveform Synthesizer, CPEM 2024 abstract
공공데이터포털
Delta-sigma algorithms are used to determine the desired sequence of quantum-based voltage pulses used by the Josephson Arbitrary Waveform Synthesizer (JAWS) to create calculable voltage waveforms. This data set contains a comparison (Fig 1. of the CPEM 2024 abstract) of a 1 kHz pulse pattern with rms amplitude of 2 mV without post-processing and with post-processing which modifies the problematic pulse pattern to remove incorrect pulses at the 0.75 ms pattern wrap point. In the time-domain, the pulse patterns are low-pass filtered at 30 MHz and the residuals relative to the 1 kHz ac signal are also shown. This data set also contains spectra which show the pulse patterns' voltage relative to the fundamental in the frequency domain.
Josephson arbitrary waveform synthesizer for ac voltage calibration, CPEM 2022
공공데이터포털
This is the dataset for 4 publishable figures in 2 page abstracted titled "Josephson arbitrary waveform synthesizer for ac voltage calibrations" submitted to the Conference on Precision Electromagnetic Measurements, CPEM 2022. QLR=Quantum Locking Range.Fig. 1. QLR (2 V rms waveforms) as a function of the dc bias current offset in all 4 arrays of Bias 1.Fig. 2. QLR (2 V rms waveforms) as a function of the compensation current amplitude in all 4 arrays of Bias 1.Fig. 3. QLR (2 V rms waveform) as a function of the pulse amplitude on Bias 1 or Bias 2 high-speed current pulse channel.Fig. 4. QLR (2 V rms waveforms) as a function of the compensation current phase in all 4 arrays of Bias 1.
Josephson arbitrary waveform synthesizer for ac voltage calibration, CPEM 2022
공공데이터포털
This is the dataset for 4 publishable figures in 2 page abstracted titled "Josephson arbitrary waveform synthesizer for ac voltage calibrations" submitted to the Conference on Precision Electromagnetic Measurements, CPEM 2022. QLR=Quantum Locking Range.Fig. 1. QLR (2 V rms waveforms) as a function of the dc bias current offset in all 4 arrays of Bias 1.Fig. 2. QLR (2 V rms waveforms) as a function of the compensation current amplitude in all 4 arrays of Bias 1.Fig. 3. QLR (2 V rms waveform) as a function of the pulse amplitude on Bias 1 or Bias 2 high-speed current pulse channel.Fig. 4. QLR (2 V rms waveforms) as a function of the compensation current phase in all 4 arrays of Bias 1.
VHF Josephson Arbitrary Waveform Synthesizer, IEEE Transactions on Applied Superconductivity
공공데이터포털
These data will appear in [1]. The abstract for that paper is given below:We report on the design, fabrication, and measurement of a Very High Frequency band Josephson Arbitrary Waveform Synthesizer (VHF-JAWS) at frequencies from 1~kHz to 50.05~MHz. The VHF-JAWS chip is composed of a series array of 12,810 Josephson junctions (JJs) embedded in a superconducting coplanar waveguide. Each JJ responds to a pattern of current pulses by creating a corresponding pattern of voltage pulses, each with a time-integrated area related to fundamental constants as $ extit{ extbf{h/2e}}$. The pulse patterns are chosen to produce quantum-based single-tone voltage waveforms with an open-circuit voltage of 50~mV~rms (\mbox{-19.03~dBm} output power into 50~$\Omega$ load impedances) at frequencies up to 50.05~MHz, which is more than twice the voltage that has been generated by previous RF-JAWS designs at 1~GHz. The VHF-JAWS is "quantum-locked", that is, it generates one quantized output voltage pulse per input current pulse per JJ while varying the dc current through the JJ array by at least 0.4~mA and the amplitude of the bias pulses by at least 10~\%. We use the large bias pulse quantum-locking range to investigate one source of error in detail: the direct feedthrough of the current bias pulses into the DUT at VHF frequencies. We reduce this error by high-pass filtering the current bias pulses and measure the error as a function of input pulse amplitude using two techniques: by measuring small changes over the quantum-locking range and by passively attenuating the input pulse amplitude so that the nonlinear JJs no longer generate voltage pulses while the error is only linearly scaled.
VHF Josephson Arbitrary Waveform Synthesizer, IEEE Transactions on Applied Superconductivity
공공데이터포털
These data will appear in [1]. The abstract for that paper is given below:We report on the design, fabrication, and measurement of a Very High Frequency band Josephson Arbitrary Waveform Synthesizer (VHF-JAWS) at frequencies from 1~kHz to 50.05~MHz. The VHF-JAWS chip is composed of a series array of 12,810 Josephson junctions (JJs) embedded in a superconducting coplanar waveguide. Each JJ responds to a pattern of current pulses by creating a corresponding pattern of voltage pulses, each with a time-integrated area related to fundamental constants as $ extit{ extbf{h/2e}}$. The pulse patterns are chosen to produce quantum-based single-tone voltage waveforms with an open-circuit voltage of 50~mV~rms (\mbox{-19.03~dBm} output power into 50~$\Omega$ load impedances) at frequencies up to 50.05~MHz, which is more than twice the voltage that has been generated by previous RF-JAWS designs at 1~GHz. The VHF-JAWS is "quantum-locked", that is, it generates one quantized output voltage pulse per input current pulse per JJ while varying the dc current through the JJ array by at least 0.4~mA and the amplitude of the bias pulses by at least 10~\%. We use the large bias pulse quantum-locking range to investigate one source of error in detail: the direct feedthrough of the current bias pulses into the DUT at VHF frequencies. We reduce this error by high-pass filtering the current bias pulses and measure the error as a function of input pulse amplitude using two techniques: by measuring small changes over the quantum-locking range and by passively attenuating the input pulse amplitude so that the nonlinear JJs no longer generate voltage pulses while the error is only linearly scaled.
Dual-Frequency-Bias Programmable Josephson Voltage Standard Circuit
공공데이터포털
This paper presents a 2 V programmable Josephson voltage standard with dual microwave frequency inputs and multiple output taps. The design provides three main features: (1) output voltages with nanovolt resolution, (2) the ability to perform a microwave frequency self-check based on a null voltage measurement, and (3) additional voltage output taps providing simultaneous 10:1 (or 5:1) divided voltage reference for resistive divider calibration. With low heat dissipation this device is well suited for implementation with a compact cryocooler as a turnkey traveling system.
Leakage Current Pathways in Josephson Arbitrary Waveform Synthesizer StandardsData shown in CPEM 2024 abstract
공공데이터포털
Dataset for multiple publishable figures in the paper entitled "Leakage Current Pathways in Josephson Arbitrary Waveform Synthesizer Standards" to be submitted to CPEM 2024 The voltage errors associated with leakage currents in Josephson arbitrary waveform synthesizer (JAWS) systems are significant contributors to the overall system accuracy. This paper describes discrepancies in output voltage between two different circuit halves on a single JAWS chip and shows that this discrepancy is dominated by ac leakage currents through the stray capacitance in the compensation leads.
AC Metrology Applications of the Josephson Effect
공공데이터포털
Datasets for the four published figures in the Paper "AC Metrology Applications of the Josephson Effect ". This paper is being submitted to Applied Physics Letters Special Topic, "Advances in Quantum Metrology,"https://publishing.aip.org/publications/journals/special-topics/apl/advances-in-quantum-metrology/ .Abstract of the paper:The performance of programmable voltage signals that exploit the quantum behavior of superconducting Josephson junctions continues to improve and enable new capabilities for applications in metrology, communications, and quantum control. We review advances in pulse-driven digital synthesis techniques with Josephson-junction-based devices. Unprecedented performance for synthesized voltage waveforms has been achieved at different frequencies, including rms amplitudes of 4 V at 1 kHz, 50 mV at 50 MHz, and 22 mV at 1.005 GHz. Josephson pulse generators have also successfully controlled and characterized superconducting qubits with a gate fidelity of 99.5%.