72 research outputs found
The Simons Observatory: Characterizing the Large Aperture Telescope Receiver with Radio Holography
We present near-field radio holography measurements of the Simons Observatory
Large Aperture Telescope Receiver optics. These measurements demonstrate that
radio holography of complex millimeter-wave optical systems comprising
cryogenic lenses, filters, and feed horns can provide detailed characterization
of wave propagation before deployment. We used the measured amplitude and
phase, at 4K, of the receiver near-field beam pattern to predict two key
performance parameters: 1) the amount of scattered light that will spill past
the telescope to 300K and 2) the beam pattern expected from the receiver when
fielded on the telescope. These cryogenic measurements informed the removal of
a filter, which led to improved optical efficiency and reduced side-lobes at
the exit of the receiver. Holography measurements of this system suggest that
the spilled power past the telescope mirrors will be less than 1% and the main
beam with its near side-lobes are consistent with the nominal telescope design.
This is the first time such parameters have been confirmed in the lab prior to
deployment of a new receiver. This approach is broadly applicable to millimeter
and sub-millimeter instruments.Comment: in proces
Rapid Acoustic Survey for Biodiversity Appraisal
Biodiversity assessment remains one of the most difficult challenges encountered by ecologists and conservation biologists. This task is becoming even more urgent with the current increase of habitat loss. Many methods–from rapid biodiversity assessments (RBA) to all-taxa biodiversity inventories (ATBI)–have been developed for decades to estimate local species richness. However, these methods are costly and invasive. Several animals–birds, mammals, amphibians, fishes and arthropods–produce sounds when moving, communicating or sensing their environment. Here we propose a new concept and method to describe biodiversity. We suggest to forego species or morphospecies identification used by ATBI and RBA respectively but rather to tackle the problem at another evolutionary unit, the community level. We also propose that a part of diversity can be estimated and compared through a rapid acoustic analysis of the sound produced by animal communities. We produced α and β diversity indexes that we first tested with 540 simulated acoustic communities. The α index, which measures acoustic entropy, shows a logarithmic correlation with the number of species within the acoustic community. The β index, which estimates both temporal and spectral dissimilarities, is linearly linked to the number of unshared species between acoustic communities. We then applied both indexes to two closely spaced Tanzanian dry lowland coastal forests. Indexes reveal for this small sample a lower acoustic diversity for the most disturbed forest and acoustic dissimilarities between the two forests suggest that degradation could have significantly decreased and modified community composition. Our results demonstrate for the first time that an indicator of biological diversity can be reliably obtained in a non-invasive way and with a limited sampling effort. This new approach may facilitate the appraisal of animal diversity at large spatial and temporal scales
Conceptual Design of the Modular Detector and Readout System for the CMB-S4 survey experiment
We present the conceptual design of the modular detector and readout system
for the Cosmic Microwave Background Stage 4 (CMB-S4) ground-based survey
experiment. CMB-S4 will map the cosmic microwave background (CMB) and the
millimeter-wave sky to unprecedented sensitivity, using 500,000 superconducting
detectors observing from Chile and Antarctica to map over 60 percent of the
sky. The fundamental building block of the detector and readout system is a
detector module package operated at 100 mK, which is connected to a readout and
amplification chain that carries signals out to room temperature. It uses
arrays of feedhorn-coupled orthomode transducers (OMT) that collect optical
power from the sky onto dc-voltage-biased transition-edge sensor (TES)
bolometers. The resulting current signal in the TESs is then amplified by a
two-stage cryogenic Superconducting Quantum Interference Device (SQUID) system
with a time-division multiplexer to reduce wire count, and matching
room-temperature electronics to condition and transmit signals to the data
acquisition system. Sensitivity and systematics requirements are being
developed for the detector and readout system over a wide range of observing
bands (20 to 300 GHz) and optical powers to accomplish CMB-S4's science goals.
While the design incorporates the successes of previous generations of CMB
instruments, CMB-S4 requires an order of magnitude more detectors than any
prior experiment. This requires fabrication of complex superconducting circuits
on over 10 square meters of silicon, as well as significant amounts of
precision wiring, assembly and cryogenic testing.Comment: 25 pages, 15 figures, presented at and published in the proceedings
of SPIE Astronomical Telescopes and Instrumentation 202
The Simons Observatory Large Aperture Telescope Receiver
The Simons Observatory (SO) Large Aperture Telescope Receiver (LATR) will be
coupled to the Large Aperture Telescope located at an elevation of 5,200 m on
Cerro Toco in Chile. The resulting instrument will produce arcminute-resolution
millimeter-wave maps of half the sky with unprecedented precision. The LATR is
the largest cryogenic millimeter-wave camera built to date with a diameter of
2.4 m and a length of 2.6 m. It cools 1200 kg of material to 4 K and 200 kg to
100 mk, the operating temperature of the bolometric detectors with bands
centered around 27, 39, 93, 145, 225, and 280 GHz. Ultimately, the LATR will
accommodate 13 40 cm diameter optics tubes, each with three detector wafers and
a total of 62,000 detectors. The LATR design must simultaneously maintain the
optical alignment of the system, control stray light, provide cryogenic
isolation, limit thermal gradients, and minimize the time to cool the system
from room temperature to 100 mK. The interplay between these competing factors
poses unique challenges. We discuss the trade studies involved with the design,
the final optimization, the construction, and ultimate performance of the
system
Recommended from our members
The Simons Observatory: Science goals and forecasts
The Simons Observatory (SO) is a new cosmic microwave background experiment
being built on Cerro Toco in Chile, due to begin observations in the early
2020s. We describe the scientific goals of the experiment, motivate the design,
and forecast its performance. SO will measure the temperature and polarization
anisotropy of the cosmic microwave background in six frequency bands: 27, 39,
93, 145, 225 and 280 GHz. The initial configuration of SO will have three
small-aperture 0.5-m telescopes (SATs) and one large-aperture 6-m telescope
(LAT), with a total of 60,000 cryogenic bolometers. Our key science goals are
to characterize the primordial perturbations, measure the number of
relativistic species and the mass of neutrinos, test for deviations from a
cosmological constant, improve our understanding of galaxy evolution, and
constrain the duration of reionization. The SATs will target the largest
angular scales observable from Chile, mapping ~10% of the sky to a white noise
level of 2 K-arcmin in combined 93 and 145 GHz bands, to measure the
primordial tensor-to-scalar ratio, , at a target level of .
The LAT will map ~40% of the sky at arcminute angular resolution to an expected
white noise level of 6 K-arcmin in combined 93 and 145 GHz bands,
overlapping with the majority of the LSST sky region and partially with DESI.
With up to an order of magnitude lower polarization noise than maps from the
Planck satellite, the high-resolution sky maps will constrain cosmological
parameters derived from the damping tail, gravitational lensing of the
microwave background, the primordial bispectrum, and the thermal and kinematic
Sunyaev-Zel'dovich effects, and will aid in delensing the large-angle
polarization signal to measure the tensor-to-scalar ratio. The survey will also
provide a legacy catalog of 16,000 galaxy clusters and more than 20,000
extragalactic sources
The Atacama Cosmology Telescope: DR6 Gravitational Lensing Map and Cosmological Parameters
We present cosmological constraints from a gravitational lensing mass map
covering 9400 sq. deg. reconstructed from CMB measurements made by the Atacama
Cosmology Telescope (ACT) from 2017 to 2021. In combination with BAO
measurements (from SDSS and 6dF), we obtain the amplitude of matter
fluctuations at 1.8% precision,
and the Hubble
constant at
1.6% precision. A joint constraint with CMB lensing measured by the Planck
satellite yields even more precise values: ,
and . These measurements agree
well with CDM-model extrapolations from the CMB anisotropies measured
by Planck. To compare these constraints to those from the KiDS, DES, and HSC
galaxy surveys, we revisit those data sets with a uniform set of assumptions,
and find from all three surveys are lower than that from ACT+Planck
lensing by varying levels ranging from 1.7-2.1. These results motivate
further measurements and comparison, not just between the CMB anisotropies and
galaxy lensing, but also between CMB lensing probing on
mostly-linear scales and galaxy lensing at on smaller scales. We
combine our CMB lensing measurements with CMB anisotropies to constrain
extensions of CDM, limiting the sum of the neutrino masses to eV (95% c.l.), for example. Our results provide independent
confirmation that the universe is spatially flat, conforms with general
relativity, and is described remarkably well by the CDM model, while
paving a promising path for neutrino physics with gravitational lensing from
upcoming ground-based CMB surveys.Comment: 30 pages, 16 figures, prepared for submission to ApJ. Cosmological
likelihood data is here:
https://lambda.gsfc.nasa.gov/product/act/actadv_prod_table.html ; likelihood
software is here: https://github.com/ACTCollaboration/act_dr6_lenslike . Also
see companion papers Qu et al and MacCrann et al. Mass maps will be released
when papers are publishe
The Atacama Cosmology Telescope: High-resolution component-separated maps across one-third of the sky
Observations of the millimeter sky contain valuable information on a number
of signals, including the blackbody cosmic microwave background (CMB), Galactic
emissions, and the Compton- distortion due to the thermal Sunyaev-Zel'dovich
(tSZ) effect. Extracting new insight into cosmological and astrophysical
questions often requires combining multi-wavelength observations to spectrally
isolate one component. In this work, we present a new arcminute-resolution
Compton- map, which traces out the line-of-sight-integrated electron
pressure, as well as maps of the CMB in intensity and E-mode polarization,
across a third of the sky (around 13,000 sq.~deg.). We produce these through a
joint analysis of data from the Atacama Cosmology Telescope (ACT) Data Release
4 and 6 at frequencies of roughly 93, 148, and 225 GHz, together with data from
the \textit{Planck} satellite at frequencies between 30 GHz and 545 GHz. We
present detailed verification of an internal linear combination pipeline
implemented in a needlet frame that allows us to efficiently suppress Galactic
contamination and account for spatial variations in the ACT instrument noise.
These maps provide a significant advance, in noise levels and resolution, over
the existing \textit{Planck} component-separated maps and will enable a host of
science goals including studies of cluster and galaxy astrophysics, inferences
of the cosmic velocity field, primordial non-Gaussianity searches, and
gravitational lensing reconstruction of the CMB.Comment: The Compton-y map and associated products will be made publicly
available upon publication of the paper. The CMB T and E mode maps will be
made available when the DR6 maps are made publi
The Atacama Cosmology Telescope: A Measurement of the DR6 CMB Lensing Power Spectrum and its Implications for Structure Growth
We present new measurements of cosmic microwave background (CMB) lensing over
sq. deg. of the sky. These lensing measurements are derived from the
Atacama Cosmology Telescope (ACT) Data Release 6 (DR6) CMB dataset, which
consists of five seasons of ACT CMB temperature and polarization observations.
We determine the amplitude of the CMB lensing power spectrum at
precision ( significance) using a novel pipeline that minimizes
sensitivity to foregrounds and to noise properties. To ensure our results are
robust, we analyze an extensive set of null tests, consistency tests, and
systematic error estimates and employ a blinded analysis framework. The
baseline spectrum is well fit by a lensing amplitude of
relative to the Planck 2018 CMB power spectra
best-fit CDM model and relative to
the best-fit model. From our lensing power
spectrum measurement, we derive constraints on the parameter combination
of
from ACT DR6 CMB lensing alone and
when combining ACT DR6 and Planck NPIPE
CMB lensing power spectra. These results are in excellent agreement with
CDM model constraints from Planck or
CMB power spectrum measurements. Our lensing measurements from redshifts
-- are thus fully consistent with CDM structure growth
predictions based on CMB anisotropies probing primarily . We find no
evidence for a suppression of the amplitude of cosmic structure at low
redshiftsComment: 45+21 pages, 50 figures. Prepared for submission to ApJ. Also see
companion papers Madhavacheril et al and MacCrann et a
Broadband, millimeter-wave antireflection coatings for large-format, cryogenic aluminum oxide optics
We present two prescriptions for broadband (∼77−252GHz), millimeter-wave antireflection coatings for cryogenic, sintered polycrystalline aluminum oxide optics: one for large-format (700 mm diameter) planar and plano–convex elements, the other for densely packed arrays of quasi-optical elements—in our case, 5 mm diameter half-spheres (called “lenslets”). The coatings comprise three layers of commercially available, polytetrafluoroethylene-based, dielectric sheet material. The lenslet coating is molded to fit the 150 mm diameter arrays directly, while the large-diameter lenses are coated using a tiled approach. We review the fabrication processes for both prescriptions, then discuss laboratory measurements of their transmittance and reflectance. In addition, we present the inferred refractive indices and loss tangents for the coating materials and the aluminum oxide substrate. We find that at 150 GHz and 300 K the large-format coating sample achieves (97±2)% transmittance, and the lenslet coating sample achieves (94±3)% transmittance
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