83 research outputs found
POLAR: Instrument and Results
We describe the design, performance, and results of a polarimeter used to make precision measurements of the 2.7 K cosmic microwave background. In the Spring of 2000 the instrument searched for polarized emission in three microwave frequency bands spanning 26–36 GHz. The instrument achieved high sensitivity and long-term stability, and has produced the most stringent limits to date on the amplitude of the large angular scale polarization of the cosmic microwave background radiation
A Limit on the Large Angular Scale Polarization of the Cosmic Microwave Background
We present an upper limit on the polarization of the Cosmic Microwave Background at 7 degree angular scales in the frequency band between 26 and 36 GHz, produced by the POLAR experiment. The campaign produced a map of linear polarization over the R.A. range 112 degrees - 275 degrees at declination 43degrees. The model-independent upper limit on the E-mode polarization component of the CMB at angular scales l = 2 - 20 is 10 microKelvin (95% confidence). The corresponding limit for the B-mode is also 10 microKelvin. Constraining the B-mode power to be zero, the 95% confidence limit on E-mode power alone is 8 microKelvin
The bolometric focal plane array of the Polarbear CMB experiment
The Polarbear Cosmic Microwave Background (CMB) polarization experiment is
currently observing from the Atacama Desert in Northern Chile. It will
characterize the expected B-mode polarization due to gravitational lensing of
the CMB, and search for the possible B-mode signature of inflationary
gravitational waves. Its 250 mK focal plane detector array consists of 1,274
polarization-sensitive antenna-coupled bolometers, each with an associated
lithographed band-defining filter. Each detector's planar antenna structure is
coupled to the telescope's optical system through a contacting dielectric
lenslet, an architecture unique in current CMB experiments. We present the
initial characterization of this focal plane
Development and characterization of the readout system for POLARBEAR-2
POLARBEAR-2 is a next-generation receiver for precision measurements of the
polarization of the cosmic microwave background (Cosmic Microwave Background
(CMB)). Scheduled to deploy in early 2015, it will observe alongside the
existing POLARBEAR-1 receiver, on a new telescope in the Simons Array on Cerro
Toco in the Atacama desert of Chile. For increased sensitivity, it will feature
a larger area focal plane, with a total of 7,588 polarization sensitive
antenna-coupled Transition Edge Sensor (TES) bolometers, with a design
sensitivity of 4.1 uKrt(s). The focal plane will be cooled to 250 milliKelvin,
and the bolometers will be read-out with 40x frequency domain multiplexing,
with 36 optical bolometers on a single SQUID amplifier, along with 2 dark
bolometers and 2 calibration resistors. To increase the multiplexing factor
from 8x for POLARBEAR-1 to 40x for POLARBEAR-2 requires additional bandwidth
for SQUID readout and well-defined frequency channel spacing. Extending to
these higher frequencies requires new components and design for the LC filters
which define channel spacing. The LC filters are cold resonant circuits with an
inductor and capacitor in series with each bolometer, and stray inductance in
the wiring and equivalent series resistance from the capacitors can affect
bolometer operation. We present results from characterizing these new readout
components. Integration of the readout system is being done first on a small
scale, to ensure that the readout system does not affect bolometer sensitivity
or stability, and to validate the overall system before expansion into the full
receiver. We present the status of readout integration, and the initial results
and status of components for the full array.Comment: Presented at SPIE Astronomical Telescopes and Instrumentation 2014:
Millimeter, Submillimeter, and Far-Infrared Detectors and Instrumentation for
Astronomy VII. Published in Proceedings of SPIE Volume 915
Design and characterization of the POLARBEAR-2b and POLARBEAR-2c cosmic microwave background cryogenic receivers
The POLARBEAR-2/Simons Array Cosmic Microwave Background (CMB) polarization
experiment is an upgrade and expansion of the existing POLARBEAR-1 (PB-1)
experiment, located in the Atacama desert in Chile. Along with the CMB
temperature and -mode polarization anisotropies, PB-1 and the Simons Array
study the CMB -mode polarization anisotropies produced at large angular
scales by inflationary gravitational waves, and at small angular scales by
gravitational lensing. These measurements provide constraints on various
cosmological and particle physics parameters, such as the tensor-to-scalar
ratio , and the sum of the neutrino masses. The Simons Array consists of
three 3.5 m diameter telescopes with upgraded POLARBEAR-2 (PB-2) cryogenic
receivers, named PB-2a, -2b, and -2c. PB-2a and -2b will observe the CMB over
multiple bands centered at 95 GHz and 150 GHz, while PB-2c will observe at 220
GHz and 270 GHz, which will enable enhanced foreground separation and
de-lensing. Each Simons Array receiver consists of two cryostats which share
the same vacuum space: an optics tube containing the cold reimaging lenses and
Lyot stop, infrared-blocking filters, and cryogenic half-wave plate; and a
backend which contains the focal plane detector array, cold readout components,
and millikelvin refrigerator. Each PB-2 focal plane array is comprised of 7,588
dual-polarization, multi-chroic, lenslet- and antenna-coupled, Transition Edge
Sensor (TES) bolometers which are cooled to 250 mK and read out using
Superconducting Quantum Interference Devices (SQUIDs) through a digital
frequency division multiplexing scheme with a multiplexing factor of 40. In
this work we describe progress towards commissioning the PB-2b and -2c
receivers including cryogenic design, characterization, and performance of both
the PB-2b and -2c backend cryostats.Comment: 20 page
Galactic foreground contribution to the BEAST CMB Anisotropy Maps
We report limits on the Galactic foreground emission contribution to the
Background Emission Anisotropy Scanning Telescope (BEAST) Ka- and Q-band CMB
anisotropy maps. We estimate the contribution from the cross-correlations
between these maps and the foreground emission templates of an H map,
a de-striped version of the Haslam et al. 408 MHz map, and a combined 100
m IRAS/DIRBE map. Our analysis samples the BEAST
declination band into 24 one-hour (RA) wide sectors with pixels
each, where we calculate: (a) the linear correlation coefficient between the
anisotropy maps and the templates; (b) the coupling constants between the
specific intensity units of the templates and the antenna temperature at the
BEAST frequencies and (c) the individual foreground contributions to the BEAST
anisotropy maps. The peak sector contributions of the contaminants in the
Ka-band are of 56.5% free-free with a coupling constant of
K/R, and 67.4% dust with K/(MJy/sr). In the Q-band the
corresponding values are of 64.4% free-free with K/R and 67.5%
dust with K/(MJy/sr). Using a lower limit of 10% in the
relative uncertainty of the coupling constants, we can constrain the sector
contributions of each contaminant in both maps to % in 21 (free-free), 19
(dust) and 22 (synchrotron) sectors. At this level, all these sectors are found
outside of the b region. By performing the same
correlation analysis as a function of Galactic scale height, we conclude that
the region within should be removed from the BEAST maps for
CMB studies in order to keep individual Galactic contributions below %
of the map's rms.Comment: 17 pages PostScript file. Better resolution figures can be found in
the web page http://www.das.inpe.br/~alex/beast_foregrounds.html. Accepted
for publication in the ApJ Suppl. Serie
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