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Report of Cosmic Microwave Background Session
Session Leader: Jeffrey Peterson
Specifications of the Proposed Observations
At frequencies near the CMB peak, 40 - 400 GHz, the ten meter telescope
will have beam sizes ranging from 3 arc-minutes to 0.3 arc minutes,
assuming edge illumination typical of anisotropy telescopes. Ray
tracing calculations for the proposed 10 meter optics indicate that a
beam throw of at least 20 arcminutes peak to peak should be possible.
Several 2-d mapping strategies may be possible with the ten meter,
including conical scan, fast raster patterns, and array pixel
differencing. The relative effectiveness of these alternatives was left
for future discussion and for the purpose of this study it was assumed
that, by some technique, 20' x 20' areas could be mapped. This gives
the instrument l space coverage from 800 to 16000.
At the Pole a horizontal chop sweeps across the sky at constant
declination, which forces us to throw the beams vertically in order to
make 2-d maps. At other sites 2-d maps can be created entirely from
horizontal scans, by allowing field rotation to turn the throw angle on
the sky. This is a negative aspect of polar observations, but because
of the stability of the South Pole atmosphere and because of small throw
of the proposed observations 2d mapping should never-the-less be
possible with this telescope.
Assuming 2' pixels the sensitivity for 300 hour integrations on these
fields is expected to be 2 to 4 micro kelvin per pixel. This estimate
was made assuming detector noise rather than sky noise dominates and
assuming that a 10' x 10' array is available.
A minimum of three frequencies will be required to remove sky noise and
allow S-Z y parameter and delta T information to be separately
determined. Additional spectral information will be valuable in order
to study and remove radio point source contamination, to measure
relativistic distortions of the S-Z spectrum and to detect extended
galactic free-free and synchrotron emission.
Interest is increasing in the CMB community in polarization
measurements. By the time the ten meter is built it should become clear
whether polarization sensitivity will be valuable at this angular scale.
Primary Anisotropy
The expected anisotropy spectrum at these l values depends strongly on
the cosmological model.
In a flat universe (lambda + omega = 1) primary anisotropy is
expected to fall below 3 microkelvin at the low end of our l range.
If the universe is flat and is described by an inflationary model, the
ten meter telescope
could measure all of the detectable acoustic peaks out to the
end of the damping tail, complementing the measurements of
Planck Surveyor which will likely map out the first six or
so acoustic peaks but will not have the resolution to measure
the entire damping tail. The shape and angular position of
the damping tail is one of the most fundamental and model-independent
features of the CMB fluctuation spectrum.
However, the prediction of very low anisotropy at high l leads one to
wonder if all possible source of fine scale anisotropy have been
considered. At degree scale, the emerging anisotropy signals have
pushed theorists to carry out careful anisotropy predictions. At arc
minute scales the theorists have not been pushed by observation. If we
provide these observations the theory community will respond with much
more detailed analyses. In other words we should not be scared off by
the current low anisotropy predictions. Better data will prompt more
analysis. Also, even if current theories are correct an upper limit at
high-l at the 10-6 level would be an important contribution.
If the universe is open, we will provide important information on
acoustic peaks number
3 and higher that PS may not be able to supply.
Anisotropy measurements with the ten meter will be essential if the
universe is open.
Also, this telescope may be the only instrument with enough
sensitivity at high frequencies to separate thermal S-Z sources from
primary anisotropy.
Secondary Anisotropy
At the small angular scales probed by this instrument, non-linear
effects become significant contributors to CMB anisotropies. Although
detailed calculations have not yet been performed, it may be
possible to extract information about the following effects
from small-scale CMB measurements:
S-Z distortions due to structures at high redshift; doppler
shifts from ionized bulk flows; Rees-Sciama effect (non-linear
evolution of gravitational potentials); non-linear evolution
of acoustic waves; Ostriker-Vishniac contribution to polarization
after reionization; and gravitational lensing from large-scale
structure.
Planck Surveyor will be confusion limited by S-Z distortions in the
clusters that will be unresolved and numerous (18,000 to 80,000 on the
sky). Finer scale observations will be needed to follow up on PS data,
and it will be particularly valuable to have sufficient spectral
coverage to allow seperation of S-Z thermal spectra from temperature
fluctuations. The low South Pole sky noise combined with the low
switched offsets afforded by an off-axis telescope make the observations
possible with this instrument uniquely valuable for PS follow-up.
Resolved sources
The ten meter will resolve clusters across the CMB frequency range
allowing cluster peculiar velocity measurements to be made for a large
sample of clusters. The velocity sensitivity of these observations is
redshift independent, so with this telescope it will be possible to map
out peculiar velocities on much smaller spatial scales than will be
possible with PS. If the universe is open or lambda dominated there are
a large number clusters of small angular size (< 1 arc-minute) on the
sky. The fine beam available at high frequencies with this large
aperture will be particularly valuable in this case.
Unresolved Sources
At radio wavelength there are a large number of weak point sources,
presumably quasars and active galactic nuclei. Some of these sources
have flat flux spectra at centimeter wavelengths. With this telescope
we will be breaking new ground, observing at higher frequency with a
finer beam, and with higher sensitivity than has been available before.
It is quite likely that we will detect point sources on our anisotropy
fields. With frequency coverage from 40 - 400 GHz we should be able to
identify these sources because they have spectra that distinguish them
from CMB structure and from the S-Z effect. This will provide a list of
interesting candidates for further study.
Complimentary Observations
The ten meter can compliment observations made with a broad set of other
observatories.
MAP will detect many clusters as unresolved decrement feature in its sky
maps. The spectral coverage and fine angular scale available with the
ten meter will allow identification of SZ effect in clusters as the
source of MAP decrement signals. BIMA will also be useful for this
purpose but only at 30 GHz.
Plank Surveyor will spectrally identify S-Z effect but will not resolve
the clusters. The ten meter will provide the resolution and spectral
range needed to study these cluster. MMA will have a 2' field of view
at 30 GHz, allowing mapping of SZ decrements. The ten meter can provide
the high frequency complimentary observations the will be necessary to
measure peculiar velocities of these clusters. Also MMA can be used to
study, at finer angular scales, any sources the ten meter detects.
CBI will have a resolution of a few arc-minutes at it's operating
frequency 30 GHz. The ten meter will extend CBI measurements to higher
l and provide multi-frequency follow up on any objects detected by CBI.
It might appear at first glance that the ten-meter duplicates the
function of JCMT and CSO, but CSO and JCMT are on-axis telescopes at a
site with much higher sky noise than the pole. In addition, the fast
cassegrain design of these telescopes gives them a smaller field of view
than the ten meter will have. Some of the observations discussed here
for the ten-meter are currently being attempted on CSO and soon will be
with SCUBA on JCMT. We can expect S-Z velocity detections, from CSO in
particular, long before the ten meter is finished. What can be provided
with the ten meter is the low side lobe, low sky noise, large array
observing program that will turn these types of observations into a
productive tool for cosmology.
OVRO and BIMA will be detecting clusters at 30 GHz on blank sky fields
within the next few years. The ten meter can provide wide frequency range
observations that these instruments cannot. |