Results from the Atacama B-mode Search (ABS) experiment

  • Akito Kusaka
  • , John Appel
  • , Thomas Essinger-Hileman
  • , James A. Beall
  • , Luis E. Campusano
  • , Hsiao Mei Cho
  • , Steve K. Choi
  • , Kevin Crowley
  • , Joseph W. Fowler
  • , Patricio Gallardo
  • , Matthew Hasselfield
  • , Gene Hilton
  • , Shuay Pwu P. Ho
  • , Kent Irwin
  • , Norman Jarosik
  • , Michael D. Niemack
  • , Glen W. Nixon
  • , Michael Snolta
  • , Lyman A. Page
  • , Gonzalo A. Palma
  • Lucas Parker, Srinivasan Raghunathan, Carl D. Reintsema, Jonathan Sievers, Sara M. Simon, Suzanne T. Staggs, Katerina Visnjic, Ki Won Yoon

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

41 Scopus citations

Abstract

The Atacama B-mode Search is an experiment designed to measure the cosmic microwave background polarization at large angular scales (0ℓ>4). It observes at 145 GHz from a site at 5,190 m elevation in northern Chile. The noise equivalent polarization temperature, or NEQ, is 41 μKs. One of the unique features of ABS is its use of a rapidly rotating ambient-temperature half-wave plate (HWP) {as the first optical element}. {The HWP spins} at 2.55 Hz to modulate the incident polarized signal at frequencies above where instrument white noise dominates over atmospheric fluctuations and other sources of low-frequency noise. We report here on the analysis of data from a 2,400 deg2 region of sky. We perform a blind analysis to reduce potential bias. After unblinding, we find agreement with the Planck TE and EE measurements on the same region of sky, {with a derived calibration factor of 00.89 ± 0.1}. We marginally detect polarized dust emission {(at 3.2 σ for EE and 2.2 σ for BB)} and give an upper limit on the tensor-to-scalar ratio of r<2.3 (95% confidence level) with the equivalent of 100 on-sky days of observation. We also present a new measurement of the polarization of Tau A and introduce new methods for calibration and data analysis associated with HWP-based observations.

Original languageEnglish (US)
Article number005
JournalJournal of Cosmology and Astroparticle Physics
Volume2018
Issue number9
DOIs
StatePublished - Sep 4 2018

All Science Journal Classification (ASJC) codes

  • Astronomy and Astrophysics

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