First season quiet observations: Measurements of cosmic microwave background polarization power spectra at 43 GHz in the multipole range 25 ≤ ℓ ≤ 475
Astrophysical Journal 741:2 (2011)
Abstract:
The Q/U Imaging ExperimenT (QUIET) employs coherent receivers at 43GHz and 94GHz, operating on the Chajnantor plateau in the Atacama Desert in Chile, to measure the anisotropy in the polarization of the cosmic microwave background (CMB). QUIET primarily targets the B modes from primordial gravitational waves. The combination of these frequencies gives sensitivity to foreground contributions from diffuse Galactic synchrotron radiation. Between 2008 October and 2010 December, over 10,000hr of data were collected, first with the 19 element 43 GHz array (3458hr) and then with the 90 element 94 GHz array. Each array observes the same four fields, selected for low foregrounds, together covering ≈1000 deg2. This paper reports initial results from the 43 GHz receiver, which has an array sensitivity to CMB fluctuations of 69μK√s. The data were extensively studied with a large suite of null tests before the power spectra, determined with two independent pipelines, were examined. Analysis choices, including data selection, were modified until the null tests passed. Cross-correlating maps with different telescope pointings is used to eliminate a bias. This paper reports the EE, BB, and EB power spectra in the multipole range ℓ = 25-475. With the exception of the lowest multipole bin for one of the fields, where a polarized foreground, consistent with Galactic synchrotron radiation, is detected with 3σ significance, the E-mode spectrum is consistent with the ΛCDM model, confirming the only previous detection of the first acoustic peak. The B-mode spectrum is consistent with zero, leading to a measurement of the tensor-to-scalar ratio of r = 0.35+1.06-0.87. The combination of a new time-stream "double-demodulation" technique, side-fed Dragonian optics, natural sky rotation, and frequent boresight rotation leads to the lowest level of systematic contamination in the B-mode power so far reported, below the level of r = 0.1. © 2011. The American Astronomical Society. All rights reserved.MESMER: MeerKAT Search for Molecules in the Epoch of Reionization
ArXiv e-prints (2011)
Dust-correlated cm wavelength continuum emission from translucent clouds ζ Oph and LDN 1780
Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society 414:3 (2011) 2424-2435
Abstract:
The diffuse cm wave IR-correlated signal, the 'anomalous' CMB foreground, is thought to arise in the dust in cirrus clouds. We present Cosmic Background Imager (CBI) cm wave data of two translucent clouds, ζ Oph and LDN 1780 with the aim of characterizing the anomalous emission in the translucent cloud environment. In ζ Oph, the measured brightness at 31GHz is 2.4σ higher than an extrapolation from 5-GHz measurements assuming a free-free spectrum on 8 arcmin scales. The SED of this cloud on angular scales of 1° is dominated by free-free emission in the cm range. In LDN 1780 we detected a 3σ excess in the SED on angular scales of 1° that can be fitted using a spinning dust model. In this cloud, there is a spatial correlation between the CBI data and IR images, which trace dust. The correlation is better with near-IR templates (IRAS 12 and 25μm) than with IRAS 100μm, which suggests a very small grain origin for the emission at 31GHz. We calculated the 31-GHz emissivities in both clouds. They are similar and have intermediate values between that of cirrus clouds and dark clouds. Nevertheless, we found an indication of an inverse relationship between emissivity and column density, which further 91̽»¨s the VSGs origin for the cm emission since the proportion of big relative to small grains is smaller in diffuse clouds. © 2011 The Authors Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society © 2011 RAS.A parametric physical model for the intracluster medium and its use in joint SZ/X-ray analyses of galaxy clusters
\mnras 410 (2011) 341-358
Dust-correlated cm wavelength continuum emission from translucent clouds ζ Oph and LDN 1780
Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society (2011)