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Optical characterization of the SPT-3G camera

Authors :
J. A. Sobrin
Leila R. Vale
S. S. Meyer
Matt Dobbs
Volodymyr Yefremenko
Ki Won Yoon
V. Novosad
I. Shirley
Faustin Carter
N. Huang
M. Jonas
Aritoki Suzuki
Erik Shirokoff
John E. Pearson
S. E. Kuhlmann
Junjia Ding
Daniel Michalik
Gene C. Hilton
E. V. Denison
Jason W. Henning
J. F. Cliche
Gensheng Wang
Alexandra S. Rahlin
T. Natoli
J. E. Ruhl
R. Basu Thakur
Chihway Chang
Zeeshan Ahmed
A. E. Lowitz
Kent D. Irwin
W. L. Holzapfel
T. de Haan
A. Foster
N. W. Halverson
Chao-Lin Kuo
A. H. Harke-Hosemann
H. Nguyen
K. Vanderlinde
Donna Kubik
W. B. Everett
Keith L. Thompson
Thomas Cecil
Jessica Avva
L. J. Saunders
Stephen Padin
Oliver Jeong
A. M. Kofman
John E. Carlstrom
C. M. Posada
Ari Cukierman
Joaquin Vieira
Q. Y. Tang
M. Korman
John Groh
Z. Pan
Carole Tucker
R. N. Gannon
M. R. Young
Amy N. Bender
Andrew Nadolski
Jason E. Austermann
Graeme Smecher
D. Dutcher
J. T. Sayre
G. I. Noble
N. L. Harrington
Antony A. Stark
Bradford Benson
A. J. Gilbert
Adam Anderson
Trupti Khaire
Joshua Montgomery
Peter A. R. Ade
K. T. Story
Nathan Whitehorn
Adrian T. Lee
Publication Year :
2018
Publisher :
Springer Verlag (Germany), 2018.

Abstract

The third-generation South Pole Telescope camera is designed to measure the cosmic microwave background across three frequency bands (centered at 95, 150 and 220 GHz) with ∼ \ud ∼\ud 16,000 transition-edge sensor (TES) bolometers. Each multichroic array element on a detector wafer has a broadband sinuous antenna that couples power to six TESs, one for each of the three observing bands and both polarizations, via lumped element filters. Ten detector wafers populate the detector array, which is coupled to the sky via a large-aperture optical system. Here we present the frequency band characterization with Fourier transform spectroscopy, measurements of optical time constants, beam properties, and optical and polarization efficiencies of the detector array. The detectors have frequency bands consistent with our simulations and have high average optical efficiency which is 86, 77 and 66% for the 95, 150 and 220 GHz detectors. The time constants of the detectors are mostly between 0.5 and 5 ms. The beam is round with the correct size, and the polarization efficiency is more than 90% for most of the bolometers.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00222291
Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....17e919134679e7d604dd3adba4af7416