Making maps of the cosmic microwave background: The MAXIMA example
Physical Review D 65:2 (2002)
Abstract:
This work describes cosmic microwave background (CMB) data analysis algorithms and their implementations, developed to produce a pixelized map of the sky and a corresponding pixel-pixel noise correlation matrix from time ordered data for a CMB mapping experiment. We discuss in turn algorithms for estimating noise properties from the time ordered data, techniques for manipulating the time ordered data, and a number of variants of the maximum likelihood map-making procedure. We pay particular attention to issues pertinent to real CMB data, and present ways of incorporating them within the framework of maximum likelihood map making. Making a map of the sky is shown to be not only an intermediate step rendering an image of the sky, but also an important diagnostic stage, when tests for and/or removal of systematic effects can efficiently be performed. The case under study is the MAXIMA-I data set. However, the methods discussed are expected to be applicable to the analysis of other current and forthcoming CMB experiments. ©2001 The American Physical Society.A Bayesian non-parametric method to detect clusters in Planck data
MONTHLY NOTICES OF THE ROYAL ASTRONOMICAL SOCIETY 336:4 (2002) 1351-1363
A combined multifrequency map for point source subtraction
MONTHLY NOTICES OF THE ROYAL ASTRONOMICAL SOCIETY 335:3 (2002) 550-554
A late-time transition in the cosmic dark energy?
MONTHLY NOTICES OF THE ROYAL ASTRONOMICAL SOCIETY 336:4 (2002) 1217-1222
Amplitude-phase analysis of cosmic microwave background maps
ASTROPHYSICAL JOURNAL 565:2 (2002) 655-660