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The Cosmology Large Angular Scale Surveyor

Authors :
Pedro Fluxa
Johannes Hubmayr
Jeff McMahon
Lingzhen Zeng
Aamir Ali
John W. Appel
Rolando Dünner
Zhilei Xu
Tobias A. Marriage
Kathleen Harrington
Nathan T. Miller
Joseph Eimer
Marco Sagliocca
Karwan Rostem
Fletcher Boone
David T. Chuss
Felipe Colazo
Sumit Dahal
Gene C. Hilton
Deniz Augusto Nunes Valle
Gary Hinshaw
Matthew Petroff
Mark Halpern
Lucas Parker
John Karakla
Jeffery Iuliano
Thomas Essinger-Hileman
Bastián Pradenas
Gonzalo A. Palma
Kevin L. Denis
Charles L. Bennett
Michael K. Brewer
Manwei Chan
Samuel H. Moseley
Duncan J. Watts
Edward J. Wollack
Source :
SPIE Proceedings.
Publication Year :
2016
Publisher :
SPIE, 2016.

Abstract

The Cosmology Large Angular Scale Surveyor (CLASS) is a four telescope array designed to characterize relic primordial gravitational waves from inflation and the optical depth to reionization through a measurement of the polarized cosmic microwave background (CMB) on the largest angular scales. The frequencies of the four CLASS telescopes, one at 38 GHz, two at 93 GHz, and one dichroic system at 145/217 GHz, are chosen to avoid spectral regions of high atmospheric emission and span the minimum of the polarized Galactic foregrounds: synchrotron emission at lower frequencies and dust emission at higher frequencies. Low-noise transition edge sensor detectors and a rapid front-end polarization modulator provide a unique combination of high sensitivity, stability, and control of systematics. The CLASS site, at 5200 m in the Chilean Atacama desert, allows for daily mapping of up to 70\% of the sky and enables the characterization of CMB polarization at the largest angular scales. Using this combination of a broad frequency range, large sky coverage, control over systematics, and high sensitivity, CLASS will observe the reionization and recombination peaks of the CMB E- and B-mode power spectra. CLASS will make a cosmic variance limited measurement of the optical depth to reionization and will measure or place upper limits on the tensor-to-scalar ratio, $r$, down to a level of 0.01 (95\% C.L.).

Details

ISSN :
0277786X
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
SPIE Proceedings
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....a78ee950558d2c79812e66896b8f26a4
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1117/12.2233125