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The Balloon-borne Large-Aperture Submillimeter Telescope for Polarization: BLAST-pol

Authors :
Marsden, G.
Ade, P. A. R.
Benton, S.
Bock, J. J.
Chapin, E. L.
Chung, J.
Devlin, M. J.
Dicker, S.
Fissel, L.
Griffin, M.
Gundersen, J. O.
Halpern, M.
Hargrave, P. C.
Hughes, D. H.
Klein, J.
Korotkov, A.
MacTavish, C. J.
Martin, P. G.
Martin, T. G.
Matthews, T. G.
Mauskopf, P.
Moncelsi, L.
Netterfield, C. B.
Novak, G.
Pascale, E.
Olmi, L.
Patanchon, G.
Rex, M.
Savini, G.
Scott, D.
Semisch, C.
Thomas, N.
Truch, M. D. P.
Tucker, C.
Tucker, G. S.
Viero, M. P.
Ward-Thompson, D.
Wiebe, D. V.
Publication Year :
2008

Abstract

The Balloon-borne Large Aperture Submillimeter Telescope (BLAST) is a sub-orbital experiment designed to study the process of star formation in local galaxies (including the Milky Way) and in galaxies at cosmological distances. Using a 2-m Cassegrain telescope, BLAST images the sky onto a focal plane, which consists of 270 bolometric detectors split between three arrays, observing simultaneously in 30% wide bands, centered at 250, 350, and 500 microns. The diffraction-limited optical system provides a resolution of 30" at 250 microns. The pointing system enables raster-like scans with a positional accuracy of ~30", reconstructed to better than 5" rms in post-flight analysis. BLAST had two successful flights, from the Arctic in 2005, and from Antarctica in 2006, which provided the first high-resolution and large-area (~0.8-200 deg^2) submillimeter surveys at these wavelengths. As a pathfinder for the SPIRE instrument on Herschel, BLAST shares with the ESA satellite similar focal plane technology and scientific motivation. A third flight in 2009 will see the instrument modified to be polarization-sensitive (BLAST-Pol). With its unprecedented mapping speed and resolution, BLAST-Pol will provide insights into Galactic star-forming nurseries, and give the necessary link between the larger, coarse resolution surveys and the narrow, resolved observations of star-forming structures from space and ground based instruments being commissioned in the next 5 years.<br />Comment: SPIE Conference Proceedings

Subjects

Subjects :
Astrophysics

Details

Database :
arXiv
Publication Type :
Report
Accession number :
edsarx.0805.4420
Document Type :
Working Paper
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1117/12.788413