6 research outputs found
Developing a New Generation of Integrated Micro-Spec Far Infrared Spectrometers for the EXperiment for Cryogenic Large-Aperture Intensity Mapping (EXCLAIM)
The current state of far-infrared astronomy drives the need to develop
compact, sensitive spectrometers for future space and ground-based instruments.
Here we present details of the -Spec spectrometers currently in
development for the far-infrared balloon mission EXCLAIM. The spectrometers are
designed to cover the m range with a resolution of $\rm R\
=\ \lambda / \Delta\lambda\ =\ 512\rm 638\ \mu\rm \mu\rm R = 64\ \muM{=}2{\sim}8\times10^{-19}\rm W/\sqrt{Hz}\rm \mu$-Spec
spectrometers for EXCLAIM.Comment: 9 pages, 5 figures, to appear in the Proceedings of the SPIE
Astronomical Telescopes + Instrumentation (2022
Overview and status of EXCLAIM, the experiment for cryogenic large-aperture intensity mapping
The EXperiment for Cryogenic Large-Aperture Intensity Mapping (EXCLAIM) is a
balloon-borne far-infrared telescope that will survey star formation history
over cosmological time scales to improve our understanding of why the star
formation rate declined at redshift z < 2, despite continued clustering of dark
matter. Specifically,EXCLAIM will map the emission of redshifted carbon
monoxide and singly-ionized carbon lines in windows over a redshift range 0 < z
< 3.5, following an innovative approach known as intensity mapping. Intensity
mapping measures the statistics of brightness fluctuations of cumulative line
emissions instead of detecting individual galaxies, thus enabling a blind,
complete census of the emitting gas. To detect this emission unambiguously,
EXCLAIM will cross-correlate with a spectroscopic galaxy catalog. The EXCLAIM
mission uses a cryogenic design to cool the telescope optics to approximately
1.7 K. The telescope features a 90-cm primary mirror to probe spatial scales on
the sky from the linear regime up to shot noise-dominated scales. The telescope
optical elements couple to six {\mu}-Spec spectrometer modules, operating over
a 420-540 GHz frequency band with a spectral resolution of 512 and featuring
microwave kinetic inductance detectors. A Radio Frequency System-on-Chip
(RFSoC) reads out the detectors in the baseline design. The cryogenic telescope
and the sensitive detectors allow EXCLAIM to reach high sensitivity in spectral
windows of low emission in the upper atmosphere. Here, an overview of the
mission design and development status since the start of the EXCLAIM project in
early 2019 is presented.Comment: SPIE Astronomical Telescopes + Instrumentation. arXiv admin note:
substantial text overlap with arXiv:1912.0711
Experiment for cryogenic large-aperture intensity mapping: instrument design
The experiment for cryogenic large-aperture intensity mapping (EXCLAIM) is a balloon-borne telescope designed to survey star formation in windows from the present to z  =  3.5. During this time, the rate of star formation dropped dramatically, while dark matter continued to cluster. EXCLAIM maps the redshifted emission of singly ionized carbon lines and carbon monoxide using intensity mapping, which permits a blind and complete survey of emitting gas through statistics of cumulative brightness fluctuations. EXCLAIM achieves high sensitivity using a cryogenic telescope coupled to six integrated spectrometers employing kinetic inductance detectors covering 420 to 540 GHz with spectral resolving power R  =  512 and angular resolution ≈4  arc min. The spectral resolving power and cryogenic telescope allow the survey to access dark windows in the spectrum of emission from the upper atmosphere. EXCLAIM will survey 305  deg2 in the Sloan Digital Sky Survey Stripe 82 field from a conventional balloon flight in 2023. EXCLAIM will also map several galactic fields to study carbon monoxide and neutral carbon emission as tracers of molecular gas. We summarize the design phase of the mission
EXCLAIM: the EXperiment for cryogenic large-aperture intensity mapping
The EXperiment for Cryogenic Large-Aperture Intensity Mapping (EXCLAIM) will constrain star formation over cosmic time by carrying out a blind and complete census of redshifted carbon monoxide (CO) and ionized carbon ([CII]) emission in cross-correlation with galaxy survey data in redshift windows from the present to z=3.5 with a fully cryogenic, balloon-borne telescope. EXCLAIM will carry out extragalactic and Galactic surveys in a conventional balloon flight planned for 2023. EXCLAIM will be the first instrument to deploy µ-Spec silicon integrated spectrometers with a spectral resolving power R=512 covering 420-540 GHz. We summarize the design, science goals, and status of EXCLAIM
Overview and status of EXCLAIM, the experiment for cryogenic large-aperture intensity mapping
The EXperiment for Cryogenic Large-Aperture Intensity Mapping (EXCLAIM) is a balloon-borne far-infrared telescope that will survey galactic formation history over cosmological time scales with redshifts between 0 and 3.5. EXCLAIM will measure the statistics of brightness fluctuations of redshifted cumulative carbon monoxide and singly ionized carbon line emissions, following an intensity mapping approach. EXCLAIM will couple all-cryogenic optical elements to six μ-Spec spectrometer modules, operating at 420-540 GHz with a spectral resolution of 512 and featuring microwave kinetic inductance detectors. Here, we present an overview of the mission and its development status