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Measurements of tropospheric ice clouds with a ground-based CMB polarization experiment, POLARBEAR

Authors :
Takakura, Satoru
Aguilar-Faúndez, Mario A. O.
Akiba, Yoshiki
Arnold, Kam
Baccigalupi, Carlo
Barron, Darcy
Beck, Dominic
Bianchini, Federico
Boettger, David
Borrill, Julian
Cheung, Kolen
Chinone, Yuji
Elleflot, Tucker
Errard, Josquin
Fabbian, Giulio
Feng, Chang
Goeckner-Wald, Neil
Hamada, Takaho
Hasegawa, Masaya
Hazumi, Masashi
Howe, Logan
Kaneko, Daisuke
Katayama, Nobuhiko
Keating, Brian
Keskitalo, Reijo
Kisner, Theodore
Krachmalnicoff, Nicoletta
Kusaka, Akito
Lee, Adrian T.
Lowry, Lindsay N.
Matsuda, Frederick T.
May, Andrew J.
Minami, Yuto
Navaroli, Martin
Nishino, Haruki
Piccirillo, Lucio
Poletti, Davide
Puglisi, Giuseppe
Reichardt, Christian L.
Segawa, Yuuko
Silva-Feaver, Maximiliano
Siritanasak, Praween
Suzuki, Aritoki
Tajima, Osamu
Takatori, Sayuri
Tanabe, Daiki
Teply, Grant P.
Tsai, Calvin
Publication Year :
2018

Abstract

The polarization of the atmosphere has been a long-standing concern for ground-based experiments targeting cosmic microwave background (CMB) polarization. Ice crystals in upper tropospheric clouds scatter thermal radiation from the ground and produce a horizontally-polarized signal. We report the detailed analysis of the cloud signal using a ground-based CMB experiment, POLARBEAR, located at the Atacama desert in Chile and observing at 150 GHz. We observe horizontally-polarized temporal increases of low-frequency fluctuations ("polarized bursts," hereafter) of $\lesssim$0.1 K when clouds appear in a webcam monitoring the telescope and the sky. The hypothesis of no correlation between polarized bursts and clouds is rejected with $>$24$\sigma$ statistical significance using three years of data. We consider many other possibilities including instrumental and environmental effects, and find no other reasons other than clouds that can explain the data better. We also discuss the impact of the cloud polarization on future ground-based CMB polarization experiments.<br />Comment: 14 pages, 12 figures, 1 table, Submitted to ApJ

Details

Database :
arXiv
Publication Type :
Report
Accession number :
edsarx.1809.06556
Document Type :
Working Paper
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.3847/1538-4357/aaf381