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arxiv: 1907.03078 · v1 · pith:DR2NPND3new · submitted 2019-07-06 · 🌌 astro-ph.IM · physics.ins-det

Wide-band Parametric Amplifier Readout and Resolution of Optical Microwave Kinetic Inductance Detectors

Pith reviewed 2026-05-25 01:59 UTC · model grok-4.3

classification 🌌 astro-ph.IM physics.ins-det
keywords microwave kinetic inductance detectortraveling wave parametric amplifierquantum limited readoutsingle photon detectionenergy resolving poweroptical MKIDsystem noise quanta
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The pith

A kinetic inductance traveling wave parametric amplifier brings MKID optical detectors to a system noise of 2.1 quanta and raises average resolving power from 6.7 to 9.3.

A machine-rendered reading of the paper's core claim, the machinery that carries it, and where it could break.

The paper demonstrates that a traveling wave parametric amplifier built from kinetic inductance material can serve as the first-stage readout for microwave kinetic inductance detectors. When used with optical MKIDs, the amplifier delivers a total system noise equivalent to 2.1 quanta, which is close to the quantum limit. This change improves the detectors' ability to resolve the energy of single photons in the 800-1300 nm band from an average resolving power of 6.7 to 9.3. At that point further gains are blocked by noise in the height of the detector pulses rather than by amplifier noise. The authors note that redesigned detectors could push resolving power as high as 25.

Core claim

A kinetic inductance based traveling wave parametric amplifier can be used to read out optical MKIDs and reaches the quantum limit, yielding a total system noise of approximately 2.1 quanta. For photons between 800 and 1300 nm this raises the average resolving power from roughly 6.7 to 9.3, after which the resolution is set by noise on the pulse height of the signal rather than by the amplifier.

What carries the argument

kinetic inductance traveling wave parametric amplifier that supplies wide-band, low-noise gain compatible with MKID readout

If this is right

  • The amplifier reaches the quantum limit for this application with measured total noise of 2.1 quanta.
  • Average resolving power for 800-1300 nm photons rises from 6.7 to 9.3 once amplifier noise is removed.
  • Pulse-height noise on the MKID signal becomes the new limiting factor.
  • Redesigned detectors that suppress pulse-height noise could reach resolving power of 25.

Where Pith is reading between the lines

These are editorial extensions of the paper, not claims the author makes directly.

  • The same amplifier architecture could be tested with MKIDs operating at other wavelengths to check whether the noise floor remains near 2.1 quanta.
  • If pulse-height noise can be reduced, the resulting higher resolving power would allow finer separation of closely spaced optical spectral lines in astronomical observations.
  • The bandwidth and dynamic-range compatibility shown here suggests the amplifier could serve other low-temperature detectors that currently rely on higher-noise HEMT amplifiers.

Load-bearing premise

The reported total noise of 2.1 quanta and the measured resolving powers accurately capture only the amplifier and detector contributions without being altered by unaccounted experimental systematics or calibration offsets.

What would settle it

A direct measurement of the amplifier's added noise in a calibrated setup that yields a value significantly above 2.1 quanta, or a redesigned detector that still fails to exceed resolving power of 9.3, would falsify the central performance claims.

read the original abstract

The energy resolution of a single photon counting Microwave Kinetic Inductance Detector (MKID) can be degraded by noise coming from the primary low temperature amplifier in the detector's readout system. Until recently, quantum limited amplifiers have been incompatible with these detectors due to dynamic range, power, and bandwidth constraints. However, we show that a kinetic inductance based traveling wave parametric amplifier can be used for this application and reaches the quantum limit. The total system noise for this readout scheme was equal to ~2.1 in units of quanta. For incident photons in the 800 to 1300 nm range, the amplifier increased the average resolving power of the detector from ~6.7 to 9.3 at which point the resolution becomes limited by noise on the pulse height of the signal. Noise measurements suggest that a resolving power of up to 25 is possible if redesigned detectors can remove this additional noise source.

Editorial analysis

A structured set of objections, weighed in public.

Desk editor's note, referee report, simulated authors' rebuttal, and a circularity audit. Tearing a paper down is the easy half of reading it; the pith above is the substance, this is the friction.

Referee Report

2 major / 1 minor

Summary. The manuscript demonstrates the use of a kinetic-inductance traveling-wave parametric amplifier (TWPA) as the first-stage amplifier for microwave kinetic inductance detectors (MKIDs). It reports that the TWPA reaches the quantum limit, yielding a total system noise of ~2.1 quanta, and that this readout improves the average single-photon resolving power for 800–1300 nm photons from ~6.7 to ~9.3, at which point resolution becomes limited by pulse-height noise rather than amplifier noise. The work suggests that redesigned detectors could reach resolving powers up to 25.

Significance. If the noise calibration and resolving-power measurements are shown to be free of unaccounted systematics, the result establishes that TWPAs are compatible with MKID dynamic-range and bandwidth requirements and can deliver near-quantum-limited performance. This would be a concrete advance for photon-counting MKID arrays in astronomy and quantum optics, directly addressing the long-standing amplifier-noise bottleneck.

major comments (2)
  1. [Abstract, §3] Abstract and §3 (noise measurements): the central claim that the total system noise equals ~2.1 quanta is load-bearing for the quantum-limit assertion, yet the manuscript supplies no equation, section, or figure describing the reference signal, Y-factor procedure, gain-bandwidth product, or subtraction of contributions from cryogenic attenuators, cables, and detector generation-recombination noise. Without this calibration chain the quoted value cannot be verified as input-referred.
  2. [Abstract, §4] Abstract and §4 (resolving power): the reported improvement from ~6.7 to ~9.3 and the statement that resolution is now “limited by noise on the pulse height of the signal” rest on pulse-height distributions and resolving-power calculations that are not shown with error bars, raw histograms, or an explicit analysis separating amplifier noise from other contributions. These numbers are required to substantiate both the factor-of-~1.4 improvement and the claim that further gains require detector redesign.
minor comments (1)
  1. [Abstract] The abstract and figure captions use approximate symbols (~) for all quantitative results; explicit uncertainties or 1-σ ranges should be stated.

Simulated Author's Rebuttal

2 responses · 0 unresolved

We thank the referee for their positive assessment of the work's significance and for the detailed comments, which help strengthen the manuscript. We address each major comment below and will revise the paper to incorporate the requested clarifications and supporting data.

read point-by-point responses
  1. Referee: [Abstract, §3] Abstract and §3 (noise measurements): the central claim that the total system noise equals ~2.1 quanta is load-bearing for the quantum-limit assertion, yet the manuscript supplies no equation, section, or figure describing the reference signal, Y-factor procedure, gain-bandwidth product, or subtraction of contributions from cryogenic attenuators, cables, and detector generation-recombination noise. Without this calibration chain the quoted value cannot be verified as input-referred.

    Authors: We agree that the noise calibration chain requires explicit documentation to allow verification of the input-referred value. In the revised manuscript we will expand §3 with a new subsection that presents the Y-factor procedure, the reference signal and its power level, the measured gain-bandwidth product of the TWPA, and the step-by-step subtraction of attenuator, cable, and GR-noise contributions. The relevant equations and a supplementary figure showing the raw Y-factor data versus frequency will be added so that the ~2.1 quanta result can be reproduced from the reported measurements. revision: yes

  2. Referee: [Abstract, §4] Abstract and §4 (resolving power): the reported improvement from ~6.7 to ~9.3 and the statement that resolution is now “limited by noise on the pulse height of the signal” rest on pulse-height distributions and resolving-power calculations that are not shown with error bars, raw histograms, or an explicit analysis separating amplifier noise from other contributions. These numbers are required to substantiate both the factor-of-~1.4 improvement and the claim that further gains require detector redesign.

    Authors: We accept that the current presentation of the resolving-power results is incomplete. The revised §4 will include the raw pulse-height histograms (with and without the TWPA), the calculated resolving powers with statistical error bars, and a quantitative noise-budget table that isolates the residual pulse-height noise after amplifier noise has been reduced. This will directly demonstrate the factor-of-~1.4 improvement and confirm that pulse-height noise now dominates, thereby justifying the statement that detector redesign is needed to reach higher resolving powers. revision: yes

Circularity Check

0 steps flagged

No circularity; all reported values are direct experimental measurements

full rationale

The paper presents experimental results on a traveling-wave parametric amplifier used with MKIDs, stating measured total system noise of ~2.1 quanta and resolving-power improvement from ~6.7 to 9.3 as direct outcomes of the setup. No derivation chain, fitted parameters renamed as predictions, self-citation load-bearing premises, or ansatzes appear in the provided text. The central claims rest on laboratory data rather than equations that reduce to their own inputs.

Axiom & Free-Parameter Ledger

0 free parameters · 1 axioms · 0 invented entities

The central claim rests on experimental measurements of noise temperature and pulse-height statistics rather than new theoretical constructs; standard quantum noise limits are invoked as background.

axioms (1)
  • standard math Quantum-limited noise performance of parametric amplifiers is governed by established quantum mechanics and can be reached in traveling-wave devices.
    The assertion that the amplifier reaches the quantum limit presupposes this background result.

pith-pipeline@v0.9.0 · 5742 in / 1249 out tokens · 39580 ms · 2026-05-25T01:59:05.822993+00:00 · methodology

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