NIKA2 Homepage

NIKA2, the second generation New-IRAM-KID-Array, is a dual band camera operating simultaneously at 150 and 260 GHz. The instrument is based on large arrays of superconducting Kinetic Inductance Detectors (KID) operated at temperatures of 100mK. NIKA2 is built by an international consortium, led by the Institute Neel (Grenoble France). Successful installation took place in early October 2015. NIKA2 is designed as a facility instrument which will remain at its present position for at least a decade. The instrument will allow to also measure linear polarizations at 1.15 mm.

NIKA2 in the web:


Overview

Some prelimiary characteristics of NIKA-2:

Band

Number of KIDs

Wavelength

Bandwidth

NEFD

HPBW

FoV

NIKA2 2 mm/150 GHz

616

2.00 mm

125-170 GHz

20 mJy*s1/2

18"

6.5'

NIKA2 1 mm/260 GHz

2x1140

1.15 mm

240-280 GHz

30 mJy*s1/2

12"

6.5'

Comments: A new 2mm array with 616 pixels was installed mid September 2016. The previously installed array had 1020 pixels. Further changes in September 2016 are a new dichroic frequency splitter, new lenses and a new cryostat window. In addition, several of the 20 readout electronics boards have been replaced with the last version. NIKA2 now has a homogeneous set of boards, plus several spare boards. Commissioning will start on October, 4th and will continue into the winter semester, when NIKA2 shall be opened to the community.

Call for proposals and time estimator

In the upcoming winter semester 2016, running from December 2016 to May 2017, a limited amount of time will be available for NIKA2 science projects. See the call for proposals. No polarization measurement is offered for the time being. On the following page, we give information on how to estimate total observing times:


Publications


Technical Documentation

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Technical runs to commission NIKA2


Support teams

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Author: Israel Hermelo. Created: 5-Aug-2015. This page is maintained by PG, CK, SL and the NIKA team. Last update: 1-Oct-2016