16 - 21 June 2024
Yokohama, Japan
Conference 13102 > Paper 13102-43
Paper 13102-43

ALMA2030 Band-4+5 receiver front-end wideband sensitivity upgrade: first year initial development and future plan

20 June 2024 • 15:00 - 15:20 Japan Standard Time | Room G318/319, North - 3F

Abstract

The idea of ALMA Band-4+5 receivers are proposed for the upgrade after 2030. The new receiver will cover the RF frequency of the original Band-4 and Band-5 with continuous frequency tuning over 125 –211 GHz with dual polarizations, dual sidebands capability. The instantaneous intermediate frequency (IF) bandwidth is up to 16 GHz per sideband and per polarization. Both the SIS-based receiver and HEMT-based receiver schemes are considered. For the SIS receiver scheme, the niobium-based SIS junctions will be fabricated to form mixer chips, and integrated into the mixer blocks with broadband waveguide 3-dB quadrature hybrid couplers with LO couplers, cryogenic IF low-noise amplifiers, and 2-20 GHz coaxial 3-dB quadrature hybrid couplers to form sideband separating down-converters. The inputs of the sideband separating down-converters are fed by the ellipsoidal mirror pairs, corrugated feedhorn and the orthomode transducer. For the HEMT-based receiver scheme, using the same optics configuration as the SIS-based receiver, the cryogenic InP HEMT low-noise amplifiers (LNAs) chains cover 125 – 211 GHz operated in 15-K ambient temperature will be the key components of the cold cartridge assembly (CCA). For the warm cartridge assembly, a pair of sideband-separating diode or resistive transistor mixers will provide four-channel 16-GHz IF instantaneous bandwidth. To avoid the possible interference between LO and IF signals, considering the possible 16 GHz IF bandwidth over 4 – 20 GHz, the LO fundamental frequency will be chosen in 24 - 32 GHz, followed by an active frequency tripler to form the phase-lock loop with 72 – 96 GHz frequency tuning range. The key components with 51.2% relative bandwidth to be developed in-house are Nb SIS mixers, RF InP HEMT LNAs, 3-dB waveguide hybrid couplers, orthomode transducers, corrugated horn antenna, and optics mirror pairs.

Presenter

Academia Sinica (Taiwan)
Yuh-Jing Hwang was born in Taiwan, in 1969. He received the B.S., M.S., and Ph. D. degrees in electrical engineering from National Taiwan University in 1991, 1993, and 2005, respectively. During 1993-1995, he served in the Navy of R.O.C. as a reserve officer. From 1995, he joined Academia Sinica Institute of Astronomy and Astrophysics (ASIAA), Taipei, Taiwan, as a microwave engineer in the beginning then promoted to assistant research fellow in 2005, where he was involved in the research and development of the Submillimeter Array (SMA), Y.-T. Lee Array (YTLA, formerly Array of Microwave Background Anisotropy), and Atacama Large Millimeter Array (ALMA) project. He is currently an associate research fellow in ASIAA. His current research interests are system integration of low-noise heterodyne receivers for radio astronomy, measurement techniques of microwave / millimeter-wave antennas, millimeter-wave monolithic integrated circuits, and analysis of nonlinear microwave circuits.
Application tracks: Radio Astronomy
Presenter/Author
Academia Sinica (Taiwan)
Author
Bangwon Lee
Korea Astronomy and Space Science Institute (Korea, Republic of)
Author
MingJye Wang
Academia Sinica (Taiwan)
Author
Academia Sinica (Taiwan)
Author
Chau-Ching Chiong
Academia Sinica (Taiwan)
Author
Yue-Fang Kuo
Department of Electrical Engineering, Yuan-Ze University (Taiwan)
Author
Academia Sinica (Taiwan)
Author
Chin-Ting Ho
Academia Sinica (Taiwan)
Author
Tse-Jun Chen
Academia Sinica (Taiwan)
Author
Wei-Chun Lu
Academia Sinica (Taiwan)
Author
Academia Sinica (Taiwan)
Author
Academia Sinica (Taiwan)
Author
Academia Sinica (Taiwan)
Author
Academia Sinica (Taiwan)
Author
Academia Sinica (Taiwan)
Author
Academia Sinica (Taiwan)
Author
Academia Sinica (Taiwan)
Author
Academia Sinica (Taiwan)
Author
Academia Sinica (Taiwan)
Author
National Astronomical Observatory of Japan (Japan)
Author
Joint ALMA Observatory (Chile)