Abstract

The basic physics of the development of broadband active electrically small superconductive antennas for the subgigahertz and gigahertz frequency ranges, based on series arrays with cells characterized by a highly linear voltage response to the magnetic component B of an electromagnetic signal, are under consideration. As such cells, bi-SQUIDs and cells based on two parallel SQIF structures that are differentially connected are proposed. Series arrays of cells with linear voltage response, including an antenna prototype, are fabricated using standard niobium technology with a critical current density of Josephson junctions of 4.5 kA/cm2 and are studied experimentally. The data obtained allow estimation of the achievable dV/dB conversion factor and the sensitivity δB for an antenna integrated with a magnetic flux converter, placed on an available area of 3.3 × 3.3 mm of a chip 5 × 5 mm in size. These values are found to be 10 μV/nT and 20 fT/Hz1/2, respectively. The conversion factor increases in proportion with the area a2 occupied by the antenna with a square flux converter, and the sensitivity is improved as a−3/2.

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