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First results from the Very Small Array -- II. Observations of the cosmic microwave background

Authors :
Keith Grainge
Rafael Rebolo
David Titterington
Richard J. Davis
Klaus Maisinger
Michael P. Hobson
Pedro Sosa Molina
Anthony Lasenby
Angela C. Taylor
Rod D. Davies
Clive Dickinson
Carlos M. Gutiérrez
Anze Slosar
J. P. Leahy
Althea Wilkinson
Rüdiger Kneissl
Richard D. E. Saunders
Elizabeth Waldram
Guy G. Pooley
Robert A. Watson
Paul F. Scott
Kieran Cleary
Ben Rusholme
M. Jones
Richard S. Savage
Jose Alberto Rubino-Martin
Pedro Carreira
Source :
Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society. 341:1066-1075
Publication Year :
2003
Publisher :
Oxford University Press (OUP), 2003.

Abstract

We have observed the cosmic microwave background temperature fluctuations in eight fields covering three separated areas of sky with the Very Small Array at 34 GHz. A total area of 101 square degrees has been imaged, with sensitivity on angular scales 3.6 - 0.4 degrees (equivalent to angular multipoles l=150-900). We describe the field selection and observing strategy for these observations. In the full-resolution images (with synthesised beam of FWHM ~ 17 arcmin) the thermal noise is typically 45 microK and the CMB signal typically 55 microK. The noise levels in each field agree well with the expected thermal noise level of the telescope, and there is no evidence of any residual systematic features. The same CMB features are detected in separate, overlapping observations. Discrete radio sources have been detected using a separate 15 GHz survey and their effects removed using pointed follow-up observations at 34 GHz. We estimate that the residual confusion noise due to unsubtracted radio sources is less than 14 mJy/beam (15 microK in the full-resolution images), which added in quadrature to the thermal noise increases the noise level by 6 %. We estimate that the rms contribution to the images from diffuse Galactic emission is less than 6 microK. We also present images which are convolved to maximise the signal-to-noise of the CMB features and are co-added in overlapping areas, in which the signal-to-noise of some individual CMB features exceeds 8.

Details

ISSN :
13652966 and 00358711
Volume :
341
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........70fa7073295817a7f93b58a91a135bc2