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High-sensitivity measurements of the cosmic microwave background power spectrum with the extended Very Small Array

Authors :
Clive Dickinson
Richard A. Battye
Pedro Carreira
Kieran Cleary
Rod D. Davies
Richard J. Davis
Ricardo Genova-Santos
Keith Grainge
Carlos M. Gutiérrez
Yaser A. Hafez
Michael P. Hobson
Michael E. Jones
Rüdiger Kneissl
Katy Lancaster
Anthony Lasenby
J. P. Leahy
Klaus Maisinger
Carolina Ödman
Guy Pooley
Nutan Rajguru
Rafael Rebolo
José Alberto Rubiño-Martin
Richard D. E. Saunders
Richard S. Savage
Anna Scaife
Paul F. Scott
Anže Slosar
Pedro Sosa Molina
Angela C. Taylor
David Titterington
Elizabeth Waldram
Robert A. Watson
Althea Wilkinson
Source :
Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society. 353:732-746
Publication Year :
2004
Publisher :
Oxford University Press (OUP), 2004.

Abstract

We present deep Ka-band ($\nu \approx 33$ GHz) observations of the CMB made with the extended Very Small Array (VSA). This configuration produces a naturally weighted synthesized FWHM beamwidth of $\sim 11$ arcmin which covers an $\ell$-range of 300 to 1500. On these scales, foreground extragalactic sources can be a major source of contamination to the CMB anisotropy. This problem has been alleviated by identifying sources at 15 GHz with the Ryle Telescope and then monitoring these sources at 33 GHz using a single baseline interferometer co-located with the VSA. Sources with flux densities $\gtsim 20$ mJy at 33 GHz are subtracted from the data. In addition, we calculate a statistical correction for the small residual contribution from weaker sources that are below the detection limit of the survey. The CMB power spectrum corrected for Galactic foregrounds and extragalactic point sources is presented. A total $\ell$-range of 150-1500 is achieved by combining the complete extended array data with earlier VSA data in a compact configuration. Our resolution of $\Delta \ell \approx 60$ allows the first 3 acoustic peaks to be clearly delineated. The is achieved by using mosaiced observations in 7 regions covering a total area of 82 sq. degrees. There is good agreement with WMAP data up to $\ell=700$ where WMAP data run out of resolution. For higher $\ell$-values out to $\ell = 1500$, the agreement in power spectrum amplitudes with other experiments is also very good despite differences in frequency and observing technique.

Details

ISSN :
13652966 and 00358711
Volume :
353
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........9462dc86f9570f5f26a3df4027ac3e1f