Abstract

Transition Edge Sensors (TESs) have found widespread application in fundamental studies due to their low background rate, high efficiency, and excellent energy resolution. This makes them suitable candidates for ALPS II, which investigates the existence of new particles (axions and axion-like-particles) which couple very weakly to photons. ALPS II anticipates an extremely low signal rate <10^{-5} cps (amounting to sim 1–2 photons a day). The detection of these low energy (sim 1 eV, 1064 nm) photons with a high energy resolution is necessary for ALPS II. We show that with our TES setup, we can analyze the TES pulses with different methods such as pulse fitting and Principal Component Analysis (PCA). These achieve (using the standard deviation) an energy resolution (Delta E/E) down to sim 8%. The pulse analysis, with a chosen fitting approach, assists also in achieving a very low dark count rate mathcal {O}left( 10^{-6} right) cps for 1064 nm photon signal searches in the TES.

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