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Year two instrument status of the SPT-3G cosmic microwave background receiver

Authors :
J. C. Groh
Chao-Lin Kuo
Christian L. Reichardt
V. Novosad
N. W. Halverson
Thomas Cecil
A. E. Lowitz
C. M. Posada
A. J. Gilbert
Aled Jones
Adam Anderson
Joaquin Vieira
S. Guns
Ki Won Yoon
N. Huang
Jason Gallicchio
K. Aylor
John E. Carlstrom
Matt Dobbs
Faustin Carter
Erik Shirokoff
H. Nguyen
S. E. Kuhlmann
T. M. Crawford
Srinivasan Raghunathan
Jessica Avva
Junjia Ding
Gene C. Hilton
Kent D. Irwin
Stephen Padin
A. H. Harke-Hosemann
T. de Haan
T. Natoli
G. I. Noble
W. L. Holzapfel
A. M. Kofman
Daniel Michalik
Volodymyr Yefremenko
W. L. K. Wu
W. B. Everett
H-M. Cho
Donna Kubik
Gensheng Wang
E. M. Leitch
L. S. Bleem
A. Foster
J. E. Ruhl
Jason W. Henning
M. Korman
Keith L. Thompson
W. Quan
J. A. Sobrin
Karen Byrum
S. S. Meyer
Amy N. Bender
Ari Cukierman
Andrew Nadolski
D. Dutcher
E. V. Denison
Peter S. Barry
J. F. Cliche
Zeeshan Ahmed
Antony A. Stark
K. Vanderlinde
N. L. Harrington
L. R. Vale
John E. Pearson
Z. Pan
Peter A. R. Ade
Sebastian Bocquet
M. Jonas
Bradford Benson
K. T. Story
Aritoki Suzuki
Oliver Jeong
Alexandra S. Rahlin
Scott Dodelson
Nathan Whitehorn
R. Basu Thakur
Chihway Chang
Carole Tucker
Trupti Khaire
Joshua Montgomery
Graeme Smecher
Adrian T. Lee
Lloyd Knox
Gilbert Holder
M. R. Young
J. T. Sayre
Publication Year :
2018

Abstract

The South Pole Telescope (SPT) is a millimeter-wavelength telescope designed for high-precision measurements of the cosmic microwave background (CMB). The SPT measures both the temperature and polarization of the CMB with a large aperture, resulting in high resolution maps sensitive to signals across a wide range of angular scales on the sky. With these data, the SPT has the potential to make a broad range of cosmological measurements. These include constraining the effect of massive neutrinos on large-scale structure formation as well as cleaning galactic and cosmological foregrounds from CMB polarization data in future searches for inflationary gravitational waves. The SPT began observing in January 2017 with a new receiver (SPT-3G) containing $\sim$16,000 polarization-sensitive transition-edge sensor bolometers. Several key technology developments have enabled this large-format focal plane, including advances in detectors, readout electronics, and large millimeter-wavelength optics. We discuss the implementation of these technologies in the SPT-3G receiver as well as the challenges they presented. In late 2017 the implementations of all three of these technologies were modified to optimize total performance. Here, we present the current instrument status of the SPT-3G receiver.<br />21 pages, 9 Figures, Presented at SPIE Astronomical Telescopes + Instrumentation 2018

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....9ab1034f69254d456a0afb1648df9a71