12 research outputs found
Observing the Evolution of the Universe
How did the universe evolve? The fine angular scale (l>1000) temperature and
polarization anisotropies in the CMB are a Rosetta stone for understanding the
evolution of the universe. Through detailed measurements one may address
everything from the physics of the birth of the universe to the history of star
formation and the process by which galaxies formed. One may in addition track
the evolution of the dark energy and discover the net neutrino mass.
We are at the dawn of a new era in which hundreds of square degrees of sky
can be mapped with arcminute resolution and sensitivities measured in
microKelvin. Acquiring these data requires the use of special purpose
telescopes such as the Atacama Cosmology Telescope (ACT), located in Chile, and
the South Pole Telescope (SPT). These new telescopes are outfitted with a new
generation of custom mm-wave kilo-pixel arrays. Additional instruments are in
the planning stages.Comment: Science White Paper submitted to the US Astro2010 Decadal Survey.
Full list of 177 author available at http://cmbpol.uchicago.ed
First attempt at measuring the CMB cross-polarization
We compute upper limits on CMB cross-polarization by cross-correlating the
PIQUE and Saskatoon experiments. We also discuss theoretical and practical
issues relevant to measuring cross-polarization and illustrate them with
simulations of the upcoming BOOMERanG 2002 experiment. We present a method that
separates all six polarization power spectra (TT, EE, BB, TE, TB, EB) without
any other "leakage" than the familiar EE-BB mixing caused by incomplete sky
coverage. Since E and B get mixed, one might expect leakage between TE and TB,
between EE and EB and between BB and EB - our method eliminates this by
preserving the parity symmetry under which TB and EB are odd and the other four
power spectra are even.Comment: Polarization movies can be found at
http://www.hep.upenn.edu/~angelica/polarization.htm
COMPASS: An instrument for measuring the polarization of the CMB on intermediate angular scales
COMPASS is an on-axis 2.6 meter telescope coupled to a correlation
polarimeter. The entire instrument was built specifically for CMB polarization
studies. Careful attention was given to receiver and optics design, stability
of the pointing platform, avoidance of systematic offsets, and development of
data analysis techniques. Here we describe the experiment, its strengths and
weaknesses, and the various things we have learned that may benefit future
efforts to measure the polarization of the CMB.Comment: To be published in the proceedings of "The Cosmic Microwave
Background and its Polarization", New Astronomy Reviews, (eds. S. Hanany and
K.A. Olive
COMPASS: an instrument for measuring the polarization of the CMB on intermediate angular scales
Abstract COMPASS is an on-axis 2.6-m telescope coupled to a correlation polarimeter. The entire instrument was built specifically for CMB polarization studies. Careful attention was given to receiver and optics design, stability of the pointing platform, avoidance of systematic offsets, and development of data analysis techniques. Here we describe the experiment, its strengths and weaknesses, and the various things we have learned that may benefit future efforts to measure the polarization of the CMB
COMPASS: An Instrument for Measuring the Polarization of the CMB on Intermediate Angular Scales
COMPASS is an on-axis 2.6 meter telescope coupled to a correlation polarimeter. The entire instrument was built specifically for CMB polarization studies. Careful attention was given to receiver and optics design, stability of the pointing platform, avoidance of systematic offsets, and development of data analysis techniques. Here we describe the experiment, its strengths and weaknesses, and the various things we have learned that may benefit future efforts to measure the polarization of the CMB. 1 Instrument Design COMPASS was designed to measure the polarization of the CMB on intermediate angular scales. Here we describe the major components of the instrument and how it performed in the field. There are essentially three major parts: the receiver, the optics system, and the pointing platform. An addendum concerning the observing site is included as well. Note that further details on any part of the experiment discussed in the paper are available [7]. 1.1 Receiver Description The polarimeter implements state-of-the-art HEMT (High-Electron Mobility Transistor) amplifiers that operate in the 26-36 GHz frequency range (Ka band). These amplifiers provide coherent amplification wit
BLAST: Balloon-Borne Large Aperture Submillimeter Telescope
BLAST is the Balloon-borne Large-Aperture Sub-millimeter Telescope. It will fly from a Long Duration Balloon (LDB) platform from Antarctica. The telescope design incorporates a 2 m primary mirror with large-format bolometer arrays operating at 250, 350 and 500 microns. By providing the first sensitive large-area (10 sq. deg.) sub-mm surveys at these wavelengths, BLAST will address some of the most important galactic and cosmological questions regarding the formation and evolution of stars, galaxies and clusters. Galactic and extragalactic BLAST surveys will: (i) identify large numbers of high-redshift galaxies; (ii) measure photometric redshifts, rest-frame FIR luminosities and star formation rates thereby constraining the evolutionary history of the galaxies that produce the FIR and sub-mm background; (iii) measure cold pre-stellar sources associated with the earliest stages of star and planet formation; (iv) make high-resolution maps of diffuse galactic emission over a wide range of galactic latitudes. In addition to achieving the above scientific goals, the exciting legacy of the BLAST LDB experiment will be a catalogue of 3000-5000 extragalactic sub-mm sources and a 100 sq. deg. sub-mm galactic plane survey. Multi-frequency follow-up observations from SIRTF, ASTRO-F, and Herschel, together with spectroscopic observations and sub-arcsecond imaging from ALMA are essential to understand the physical nature of the BLAST sources
Observing the Evolution of the Universe
How did the universe evolve? The fine angular scale (l>1000) temperature and polarization anisotropies in the CMB are a Rosetta stone for understanding the evolution of the universe. Through detailed measurements one may address everything from the physics of the birth of the universe to the history of star formation and the process by which galaxies formed. One may in addition track the evolution of the dark energy and discover the net neutrino mass.
We are at the dawn of a new era in which hundreds of square degrees of sky can be mapped with arcminute resolution and sensitivities measured in microKelvin. Acquiring these data requires the use of special purpose telescopes such as the Atacama Cosmology Telescope (ACT), located in Chile, and the South Pole Telescope (SPT). These new telescopes are outfitted with a new generation of custom mm-wave kilo-pixel arrays. Additional instruments are in the planning stages