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Small Aperture Telescopes for the Simons Observatory

Authors :
Aamir M. Ali
Shunsuke Adachi
Kam Arnold
Peter Ashton
Andrew Bazarko
Yuji Chinone
Gabriele Coppi
Lance Corbett
KevinD Crowley
Kevin T Crowley
Mark Devlin
Simon Dicker
Shannon Duff
Chris Ellis
Nicholas Galitzki
Neil Goeckner-Wald
Kathleen Harrington
Erin Healy
Charles A Hill
Shuay-Pwu Patty Ho
Johannes Hubmayr
Brian Keating
Kenji Kiuchi
Akito Kusaka
Adrian T Lee
Michael Ludlam
Aashrita Mangu
Frederick Matsuda
Heather McCarrick
Federico Nati
Michael D. Niemack
Haruki Nishino
John Orlowski-Scherer
MayuriSathyanarayana Rao
Christopher Raum
YukiSakurai
Maria Salatino
Trevor Sasse
Joseph Seibert
Carlos Sierra
Maximiliano Silva-Feaver
Jacob Spisak
Sara M Simon
Suzanne Staggs
Osamu Tajima
·Grant Teply
Tran Tsan
Edward Wollack
Bejamin Westbrook
Zhilei Xu
Mario Zannoni
Ningfeng Zhu
Source :
Journal of Low Temperature Physics. 200
Publication Year :
2020
Publisher :
United States: NASA Center for Aerospace Information (CASI), 2020.

Abstract

The Simons Observatory (SO) is an upcoming cosmic microwave background(CMB) experiment located on Cerro Toco, Chile, that will map the microwave sky in temperature and polarization in six frequency bands spanning 27 to 285 GHz. SO will consist of one 6-meter Large Aperture Telescope (LAT) fielding∼30,000 detectors and an array of three 0.42-meter Small Aperture Telescopes (SATs) fielding an additional 30,000 detectors. This synergy will allow for the extremely sensitive characterization of the CMB over an-gular scales ranging from an arcmin to tens of degrees, enabling a wide range of scientific output. Here we focus on the SATs targeting degree angular scales with successive dichroic instruments observing at Mid-Frequency (MF: 93/145 GHz), Ultra-High-Frequency (UHF:225/285 GHz), and Low-Frequency (LF: 27/39 GHz). The three SATs will be able to map∼10% of the sky to a noise level of∼2 μK-arcmin when combining 93 and 145 GHz. The multiple frequency bands will allow the CMB to be separated from galactic foregrounds (primarily synchrotron and dust), with the primary science goal of characterizing the primordial tensor-to-scalar ratio, r, at a target level ofσ(r)≈0.003.

Subjects

Subjects :
Instrumentation And Photography

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
15737357 and 00222291
Volume :
200
Database :
NASA Technical Reports
Journal :
Journal of Low Temperature Physics
Notes :
920121
Publication Type :
Report
Accession number :
edsnas.20210013204
Document Type :
Report
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1007/s10909-020-02430-5