2,494 research outputs found
DASI Three-Year Cosmic Microwave Background Polarization Results
We present the analysis of the complete 3-year data set obtained with the
Degree Angular Scale Interferometer (DASI) polarization experiment, operating
from the Amundsen-Scott South Pole research station. Additional data obtained
at the end of the 2002 Austral winter and throughout the 2003 season were added
to the data from which the first detection of polarization of the cosmic
microwave background radiation was reported. The analysis of the combined data
supports, with increased statistical power, all of the conclusions drawn from
the initial data set. In particular, the detection of E-mode polarization is
increased to 6.3 sigma confidence level, TE cross-polarization is detected at
2.9 sigma, and B-mode polarization is consistent with zero, with an upper limit
well below the level of the detected E-mode polarization. The results are in
excellent agreement with the predictions of the cosmological model that has
emerged from CMB temperature measurements. The analysis also demonstrates that
contamination of the data by known sources of foreground emission is
insignificant.Comment: 13 pages Latex, 10 figures, submitted to Ap
Cosmological Parameter Extraction from the First Season of Observations with DASI
The Degree Angular Scale Interferometer (\dasi) has measured the power
spectrum of the Cosmic Microwave Background anisotropy over the range of
spherical harmonic multipoles 100<l<900. We compare this data, in combination
with the COBE-DMR results, to a seven dimensional grid of adiabatic CDM models.
Adopting the priors h>0.45 and 0.0<=tau_c<=0.4, we find that the total density
of the Universe Omega_tot=1.04+/-0.06, and the spectral index of the initial
scalar fluctuations n_s=1.01+0.08-0.06, in accordance with the predictions of
inflationary theory. In addition we find that the physical density of baryons
Omega_b.h^2=0.022+0.004-0.003, and the physical density of cold dark matter
Omega_cdm.h^2=0.14+/-0.04. This value of Omega_b.h^2 is consistent with that
derived from measurements of the primordial abundance ratios of the light
elements combined with big bang nucleosynthesis theory. Using the result of the
HST Key Project h=0.72+/-0.08 we find that Omega_t=1.00+/-0.04, the matter
density Omega_m=0.40+/-0.15, and the vacuum energy density
Omega_lambda=0.60+/-0.15. (All 68% confidence limits.)Comment: 7 pages, 4 figures, minor changes in response to referee comment
Archeops: an instrument for present and future cosmology
Archeops is a balloon-borne instrument dedicated to measure the cosmic
microwave background (CMB) temperature anisotropies. It has, in the millimetre
domain (from 143 to 545 GHz), a high angular resolution (about 10 arcminutes)
in order to constrain high l multipoles, as well as a large sky coverage
fraction (30%) in order to minimize the cosmic variance. It has linked, before
WMAP, Cobe large angular scales to the first acoustic peak region. From its
results, inflation motivated cosmologies are reinforced with a flat Universe
(Omega_tot=1 within 3%). The dark energy density and the baryonic density are
in very good agreement with other independent estimations based on supernovae
measurements and big bang nucleosynthesis. Important results on galactic dust
emission polarization and their implications for Planck are also addressed.Comment: 4 pages, 2 figures, to appear in Proceedings of the Multiwavelength
Cosmology Conference, June 2003, Mykonos Island, Greec
DASI First Results: A Measurement of the Cosmic Microwave Background Angular Power Spectrum
We present measurements of anisotropy in the Cosmic Microwave Background
(CMB) from the first season of observations with the Degree Angular Scale
Interferometer (DASI). The instrument was deployed at the South Pole in the
austral summer 1999--2000, and made observations throughout the following
austral winter. We have measured the angular power spectrum of the CMB in the
range 100<l<900 with high signal-to-noise. In this paper we review the
formalism used in the analysis, in particular the use of constraint matrices to
project out contaminants such as ground and point source signals, and to test
for correlations with diffuse foreground templates. We find no evidence of
foregrounds other than point sources in the data, and find a maximum likelihood
temperature spectral index beta = -0.1 +/- 0.2 (1 sigma), consistent with CMB.
We detect a first peak in the power spectrum at l approx 200, in agreement with
previous experiments. In addition, we detect a peak in the power spectrum at l
approx 550 and power of similar magnitude at l approx 800 which are consistent
with the second and third harmonic peaks predicted by adiabatic inflationary
cosmological models.Comment: 8 pages, 1 figure, minor changes in response to referee comment
Phase measurement device using inphase and quadrature components for phase estimation
A phasemeter for estimating the phase of a signal. For multi-tone signals, multiple phase estimates may be provided. An embodiment includes components operating in the digital domain, where a sampled input signal is multiplied by cosine and sine terms to provide estimates of the inphase and quadrature components. The quadrature component provides an error signal that is provided to a feedback loop, the feedback loop providing a model phase that tends to track the phase of a tone in the input signal. The cosine and sine terms are generated from the model phase. The inphase and quadrature components are used to form a residual phase, which is added to the model phase to provide an estimate of the phase of the input signal. Other embodiments are described and claimed
The Impact of Atmospheric Fluctuations on Degree-scale Imaging of the Cosmic Microwave Background
Fluctuations in the brightness of the Earth's atmosphere originating from
water vapor are an important source of noise for ground-based instruments
attempting to measure anisotropy in the Cosmic Microwave Background. This paper
presents a model for the atmospheric fluctuations and derives simple
expressions to predict the contribution of the atmosphere to experimental
measurements. Data from the South Pole and from the Atacama Desert in Chile,
two of the driest places on Earth, are used to assess the level of fluctuations
at each site.Comment: 29 pages, 7 figures, 1 table, appears in The Astrophysical Journa
The performance of spherical wavelets to detect non-Gaussianity in the CMB sky
We investigate the performance of spherical wavelets in discriminating
between standard inflationary models (Gaussian) and non-Gaussian models. For
the later we consider small perturbations of the Gaussian model in which an
artificially specified skewness or kurtosis is introduced through the Edgeworth
expansion. By combining all the information present in all the wavelet scales
with the Fisher discriminant, we find that the spherical Mexican Hat wavelets
are clearly superior to the spherical Haar wavelets. The former can detect
levels of the skewness and kurtosis of ~1% for 33' resolution, an order of
magnitude smaller than the later. Also, as expected, both wavelets are better
for discriminating between the models than the direct consideration of moments
of the temperature maps. The introduction of instrumental white noise in the
maps, S/N=1, does not change the main results of this paper.Comment: 12 pages, 7 figures, accepted by MNRAS with minor change
Constraints on perfect fluid and scalar field dark energy models from future redshift surveys
We discuss the constraints that future photometric and spectroscopic redshift
surveys can put on dark energy through the baryon oscillations of the power
spectrum. We model the dark energy either with a perfect fluid or a scalar
field and take into account the information contained in the linear growth
function. We show that the growth function helps to break the degeneracy in the
dark energy parameters and reduce the errors on roughly by 30% making
more appealing multicolor surveys based on photometric redshifts. We find that
a 200 square degrees spectroscopic survey reaching can constrain
to within and to using photometric redshifts with absolute uncertainty
of 0.02. In the scalar field case we show that the slope of the inverse
power-law potential for dark energy can be constrained to
(spectroscopic redshifts) or (photometric redshifts), i.e.
better than with future ground-based supernovae surveys or CMB data.Comment: 27 pages, submitted to MNRA
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