Four-year Cosmology Large Angular Scale Surveyor (CLASS) Observations: On-sky Receiver Performance at 40, 90, 150, and 220 GHz Frequency Bands
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2021-07-16
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Dahal, Sumit et al. “our-year Cosmology Large Angular Scale Surveyor (CLASS) Observations: On-sky Receiver Performance at 40, 90, 150, and 220 GHz Frequency Bands.” The Astrophysical Journal 926, no. 1 (9 February 2022). DOI 10.3847/1538-4357/ac397c
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Abstract
The Cosmology Large Angular Scale Surveyor (CLASS) observes the polarized cosmic microwave
background (CMB) over the angular scales of 1◦ . θ ≤ 90◦ with the aim of characterizing primordial
gravitational waves and cosmic reionization. We report on the on-sky performance of the CLASS
Q-band (40 GHz), W-band (90 GHz), and dichroic G-band (150/220 GHz) receivers that have been
operational at the CLASS site in the Atacama desert since June 2016, May 2018, and September
2019, respectively. We show that the noise-equivalent power measured by the detectors matches the
expected noise model based on on-sky optical loading and lab-measured detector parameters. Using
Moon, Venus, and Jupiter observations, we obtain power-to-antenna-temperature calibrations and
optical efficiencies for the telescopes. From the CMB survey data, we compute instantaneous array
noise-equivalent-temperature sensitivities of 22, 19, 24, and 56 µKcmb√
s for the 40, 90, 150, and
220 GHz frequency bands, respectively. These noise temperatures refer to white noise amplitudes,
which contribute to sky maps at all angular scales. Future papers will assess additional noise sources
impacting larger angular scales.