When I say cryogenic I mean one Kelvin — sorry I should have been more specific. Ultimately no capacitors are spec’d down this low but it’s low temperature physics lore what works well. Solid tantalums, and certain ceramics are acceptable. HEMTs and HBTs are acceptable.
I’m certainly not against DC coupling — I just don’t know how to do it for a 50 ohm input impedance! Could Marco and David say a bit more about designing the input to be 50 ohms and DC coupled? I’ve never designed an amp like this. Could you maybe point me to a reference or a schematic or draw me one?
Methinks that Infineon wrote that their SiGe transistors had 200 pV/rtHz at cryo temperatures IIRC.
What is Vbe at cryo? What Beta can we expect? That should not be great, also.
When the second stage is a cascode, that usually does not add noise worth to talk about.
It has a large output impedance, allowing a large load resistor and thusly, a lot of gain.
But when the beta is really small, effective shot current may be not so small.
In short, we can only generate hot air when we do not know the 1st stage. If it makes some
healthy gain, it should determine the noise, at least most of it.
A Cascode would give the first transistor the opportunity to use a very low Vce, thus low
heat dissipation and no headroom required for AC Vds/Vce. And the cascode
would live on the very same current. Output impedance could be healed by a follower,
That could sit in some distance to the very cold.
Where do the 50 Ohms come from? Just because there is a network analyzer on the table?
Cheers, Gerhard