Back to Search Start Over

CLASS Data Pipeline and Maps for 40~GHz Observations through 2022

Authors :
Li, Yunyang
Eimer, Joseph
Osumi, Keisuke
Appel, John
Brewer, Michael
Ali, Aamir
Bennett, Charles
Bruno, Sarah Marie
Bustos, Ricardo
Chuss, David
Cleary, Joseph
Couto, Jullianna
Dahal, Sumit
Datta, Rahul
Denis, Kevin
Dunner, Rolando
Inostroza, Francisco Raul Espinoza
Essinger-Hileman, Thomas
Fluxa, Pedro
Harrington, Kathleen
Iuliano, Jeffrey
Karakla, John
Marriage, Tobias
Miller, Nathan
Novack, Sasha
Núñez, Carolina
Petroff, Matthew
Reeves, Rodrigo
Rostem, Karwan
Shi, Rui
Valle, Deniz
Watts, Duncan
Weiland, J.
Wollack, Edward
Xu, Zhilei
Zeng, Lingzhen
Publication Year :
2023

Abstract

The Cosmology Large Angular Scale Surveyor (CLASS) is a telescope array that observes the cosmic microwave background over 75\% of the sky from the Atacama Desert, Chile, at frequency bands centered near 40, 90, 150, and 220~GHz. This paper describes the CLASS data pipeline and maps for 40~GHz observations conducted from August 2016 to May 2022. We demonstrate how well the CLASS survey strategy, with rapid ($\sim10\,\mathrm{Hz}$) front-end modulation, recovers the large-scale Galactic polarization signal from the ground: the mapping transfer function recovers $\sim75$\% of $EE$, $BB$, and $VV$ power at $\ell=20$ and $\sim45$\% at $\ell=10$. We present linear and circular polarization maps over 75\% of the sky. Simulations based on the data imply the maps have a white noise level of $110\,\mathrm{\mu K\, arcmin}$ and correlated noise component rising at low-$\ell$ as $\ell^{-2.2}$. The transfer-function-corrected low-$\ell$ component is comparable to the white noise at the angular knee frequencies of $\ell\approx16$ (linear polarization) and $\ell\approx12$ (circular polarization). Finally, we present simulations of the level at which expected sources of systematic error bias the measurements, finding sub-percent bias for the $\Lambda\mathrm{CDM}$ $EE$ power spectra. Bias from $E$-to-$B$ leakage due to the data reduction pipeline and polarization angle uncertainty approaches the expected level for an $r=0.01$ $BB$ power spectrum. Improvements to the instrument calibration and the data pipeline will decrease this bias.<br />Comment: 29 pages, 17 figures; submitted to ApJ

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....c312c0dfd3b87943d7fa6df103729c46