Detecting the B-mode Polarisation of the CMB with Clover

ArXiv 0805.3690 (2008)

Authors:

CE North, BR Johnson, PAR Ade, MD Audley, C Baines, RA Battye, ML Brown, P Cabella, PG Calisse, AD Challinor, WD Duncan, PG Ferreira, WK Gear, D Glowacka, DJ Goldie, PK Grimes, M Halpern, V Haynes, GC Hilton, KD Irwin, ME Jones, AN Lasenby, PJ Leahy, J Leech, B Maffei, P Mauskopf, SJ Melhuish, D O'Dea, SM Parsley, L Piccirillo, G Pisano, CD Reintsema, G Savini, R Sudiwala, D Sutton, AC Taylor, G Teleberg, D Titterington, V Tsaneva, C Tucker, R Watson, S Withington, G Yassin, J Zhang

Abstract:

We describe the objectives, design and predicted performance of Clover, which is a ground-based experiment to measure the faint ``B-mode'' polarisation pattern in the cosmic microwave background (CMB). To achieve this goal, clover will make polarimetric observations of approximately 1000 deg^2 of the sky in spectral bands centred on 97, 150 and 225 GHz. The observations will be made with a two-mirror compact range antenna fed by profiled corrugated horns. The telescope beam sizes for each band are 7.5, 5.5 and 5.5 arcmin, respectively. The polarisation of the sky will be measured with a rotating half-wave plate and stationary analyser, which will be an orthomode transducer. The sky coverage combined with the angular resolution will allow us to measure the angular power spectra between 20 < l < 1000. Each frequency band will employ 192 single polarisation, photon noise limited TES bolometers cooled to 100 mK. The background-limited sensitivity of these detector arrays will allow us to constrain the tensor-to-scalar ratio to 0.026 at 3sigma, assuming any polarised foreground signals can be subtracted with minimal degradation to the 150 GHz sensitivity. Systematic errors will be mitigated by modulating the polarisation of the sky signals with the rotating half-wave plate, fast azimuth scans and periodic telescope rotations about its boresight. The three spectral bands will be divided into two separate but nearly identical instruments - one for 97 GHz and another for 150 and 225 GHz. The two instruments will be sited on identical three-axis mounts in the Atacama Desert in Chile near Pampa la Bola. Observations are expected to begin in late 2009.

Detecting the B-mode Polarisation of the CMB with Clover

ArXiv e-prints (2008)

Authors:

CE North, BR Johnson, PAR Ade, MD Audley, C Baines, RA Battye, ML Brown, P Cabella, PG Calisse, AD Challinor, WD Duncan, PG Ferreira, WK Gear, D Glowacka, DJ Goldie, PK Grimes, M Halpern, V Haynes, GC Hilton, KD Irwin, ME Jones, AN Lasenby, PJ Leahy, J Leech, B Maffei, P Mauskopf, SJ Melhuish, D O Dea, SM Parsley, L Piccirillo, G Pisano, CD Reintsema, G Savini, R Sudiwala, D Sutton, AC Taylor, G Teleberg, D Titterington, V Tsaneva, C Tucker, R Watson, S Withington, G Yassin, J Zhang

Erratum: Source subtraction for the extended Very Small Array and 33-GHz source count estimates

\mnras 386 (2008) 1759-1760

Authors:

KA Cleary, AC Taylor, E Waldram, RA Battye, C Dickinson, RD Davies, RJ Davis, R Genova-Santos, K Grainge, ME Jones, R Kneissl, GG Pooley, R Rebolo, JA Rubi no-Martin, RDE Saunders, PF Scott, A Slosar, D Titterington, RA Watson

A novel heterodyne interferometer for millimetre and sub-millimetre astronomy

Ninteenth International Symposium on Space Terahertz Technology (2008) 293-293

Authors:

PK Grimes, M Brock, CM Holler, K Jacobs, ME Jones, OG King, J Leech, AC Taylor, G Yassin

Implementation of an optimized Cassegrain system for radio telescopes

Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society 384:3 (2008) 1207-1210

Authors:

CM Holler, RE Hills, ME Jones, K Grainge, T Kaneko

Abstract:

We present the antenna design for a radio interferometer, the Arcminute Microkelvin Imager, together with its beam pattern measurement. Our aim was to develop a low-cost system with high aperture efficiency and low ground spill across the frequency range 12-18 GHz. We use a modified Cassegrain system consisting of a commercially available paraboloidal primary mirror with a diameter of 3.7 m, and a shaped secondary mirror. The secondary mirror is oversized with respect to a ray optics design and has a surface that is bent towards the primary near its outer edge using a square term for the shaping. The antennas are simple to manufacture and therefore their cost is low. The design increased the antenna gain by approximately 10 per cent compared to a normal Cassegrain system while still maintaining low contamination from ground spill and using a simple design for the horn. © 2008 RAS.