22 research outputs found
The South Pole Telescope
A new 10 meter diameter telescope is being constructed for deployment at the
NSF South Pole research station. The telescope is designed for conducting
large-area millimeter and sub-millimeter wave surveys of faint, low contrast
emission, as required to map primary and secondary anisotropies in the cosmic
microwave background. To achieve the required sensitivity and resolution, the
telescope design employs an off-axis primary with a 10m diameter clear
aperture. The full aperture and the associated optics will have a combined
surface accuracy of better than 20 microns rms to allow precision operation in
the submillimeter atmospheric windows. The telescope will be surrounded with a
large reflecting ground screen to reduce sensitivity to thermal emission from
the ground and local interference. The optics of the telescope will support a
square degree field of view at 2mm wavelength and will feed a new 1000-element
micro-lithographed planar bolometric array with superconducting transition-edge
sensors and frequency-multiplexed readouts. The first key project will be to
conduct a survey over approximately 4000 degrees for galaxy clusters using the
Sunyaev-Zel'dovich Effect. This survey should find many thousands of clusters
with a mass selection criteria that is remarkably uniform with redshift. Armed
with redshifts obtained from optical and infrared follow-up observations, it is
expected that the survey will enable significant constraints to be placed on
the equation of state of the dark energy.Comment: Written prior to SPIE conference, June 21-25, 2004. 19 pages, 13
figures. Also available (with higher resolution figures) at
http://spt.uchicago.edu