Detection of noise-corrupted sinusoidal signals with Josephson junctions.

Phys Rev E Stat Nonlin Soft Matter Phys

CNR/SPIN and Department of Biological and Environmental Sciences, University of Sannio, Via Port'Arsa 11, I-82100 Benevento, Italy.

Published: October 2010

We investigate the possibility of exploiting the speed and low noise features of Josephson junctions for detecting sinusoidal signals masked by Gaussian noise. We show that the escape time from the static locked state of a Josephson junction is very sensitive to a small periodic signal embedded in the noise, and therefore the analysis of the escape times can be employed to reveal the presence of the sinusoidal component. We propose and characterize two detection strategies: in the first, the initial phase is supposedly unknown (incoherent strategy), while in the second, the signal phase remains unknown but is fixed (coherent strategy). Our proposals are both suboptimal, with the linear filter being the optimal detection strategy, but they present some remarkable features, such as resonant activation, that make detection through Josephson junctions appealing in some special cases.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevE.82.046712DOI Listing

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