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We report an accurate measurement of the phase noise of a thermally limited electronic oscillator at 300 K. By thermally limited we mean that the white signal-to-noise ratio of the oscillator is at or near the level generated by the thermal noise of the 50 ohm source resistor. The measurement is devoid of the anti-correlation effect that originates from the common mode power splitter in a cross-spectrum technique. The anti-correlation effect is mitigated by cooling the power splitter to a liquid helium temperature (4 K). The measurements in this paper are the first proof of theoretical claims that additive thermal noise from the splitter can be reduced significantly with cryogenic cooling and this can eliminate any anti-correlated noise introduced by use of the two-channel cross-spectrum technique. We also confirm measurements of partial anti-correlation error of (-1.3 +/- 0.6) dB that agree with theory when the splitter is at liquid nitrogen temperature of 77 K.
Crystalline optical cavities are the foundation of todays state-of-the-art ultrastable lasers. Building on our previous silicon cavity effort, we now achieve the fundamental thermal noise-limited stability for a 6 cm long silicon cavity cooled to 4 K
Research reactors host a wide range of activities that make use of the intense neutron fluxes generated at these facilities. Recent interest in performing measurements with relatively low event rates, e.g. reactor antineutrino detection, at these fac
We present the first experimental study of a new type of power recycling microwave interferometer designed for low noise measurements. This system enhances sensitivity to phase fluctuations in a Device Under Test, independent of input power levels. T
We estimate the power spectrum of SZ(Sunyaev-Zeldovich)-effect-induced temperature fluctuations on sub-degree scales by using the cross correlation between the three-year WMAP maps and 2MASS galaxy distribution. We produced the SZ effect maps by hydr
For photon-counting applications at ultraviolet wavelengths, there are currently no detectors that combine high efficiency (> 50%), sub-nanosecond timing resolution, and sub-Hz dark count rates. Superconducting nanowire single-photon detectors (SNSPD