- QUIET
Infobox Telescope
name = QUIET
caption = An illustration of the completed QUIET telescope on the CBI platform.
organization = International collaboration
location =Llano de Chajnantor Observatory
coords =
altitude = 5,080 m
weather =
wavelength = 40 and 90 GHz
built =
first_light =
website = [http://quiet.uchicago.edu/ quiet.uchicago.edu]
style = 4 telescopes
diameter = Three 2 m, one 7 m
angular_resolution = Few arcminutes to several degrees
area =
focal_length =
mounting =
dome =QUIET is an
astronomy experiment to study the polarization of thecosmic microwave background radiation . QUIET stands for Q/U Imaging ExperimenT. The Q/U in the name refers to the ability of the telescope to measure the Q and UStokes parameters simultaneously. QUIET will be located at an elevation of 5,080metre s (16,700 feet) atLlano de Chajnantor Observatory in theChile anAndes . It is expected to start observing around 2008.QUIET is the result of an international collaboration that has its origins in the CAPMAP,
Cosmic Background Imager (CBI) andQUaD collaborations. The collaboration consists of 7 groups in theUnited States (theCalifornia Institute of Technology , theUniversity of Chicago ,Columbia University , theJet Propulsion Laboratory , theUniversity of Miami ,Princeton University andStanford University ), 4 groups inEurope (theUniversity of Manchester , the Max-Planck-Institut für Radioastronomie Bonn, theUniversity of Oslo and theUniversity of Oxford ) and one group inJapan (KEK ; the first time a Japan group has been involved in CMB studies). Other members of the collaboration are from theUniversity of California, Berkeley , theGoddard Space Flight Center and theHarvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics .cite web | url=http://quiet.uchicago.edu/ | title=QUIET (Q/U Imaging ExperimenT) | publisher=QUIET collaboration | date=17 February 2008 | accessdate=2008-05-24]Instrument
QUIET will have arrays of detectors at two frequencies: 40
GHz (Q band ) and 90 GHz (W band ). It will use four telescopes, three of which will be purpose-built 2 m ones with the other being the 7 m Crawford Hill telescope currently used forCAPMAP . As a result, it will haveangular resolution s between a few arcminutes and several degrees. The detectors are mass-produced coherentcorrelation polarimeter s.The instrument is being constructed in three phases. The first phase consisted of a 7-element 90 GHz array to demonstrate the technology. The second phase aims to mount a 91-element 90 GHz array (with 18 GHz bandwidth) and a 19-element 40 GHz array (with 8 GHz bandwidth) on 1.4 m cassegrain telescopes, mounted on what is currently the CBI platform. It is expected that these will start observing in 2008. The third phase aims to construct four further arrays by around 2010. Two of these will be at 40 GHz, with 91 elements each, and the other two will be at 90 GHz, with 397 elements each. These will then be mounted on three 2 m dishes on the CBI platform and the 7 m telescope.cite web | url=http://quiet.uchicago.edu/instrumentation/index.html | title=QUIET: Instrumentation | publisher=QUIET collaboration | date=
27 January 2008 | accessdate=2008-05-24] Samtleben (2008)]The instrument is located at a height of 5,080 m at
Llano de Chajnantor Observatory in theChile anAndes . The site is owned by the Chilean government, and is leased to theAtacama Large Millimeter Array . The site was selected due to the altitude, current infrastructure and accessibility, as well as the low humidity of the site, which reduces the contamination of the detected signals by the atmosphere.cite web | url=http://quiet.uchicago.edu/site/index.html | title=QUIET: Site | publisher=QUIET collaboration | date=27 January 2008 | accessdate=2008-05-24]cience
QUIET will measure the polarization of the
cosmic microwave background radiation (CMB). This polarization is commonly split into two components: E-modes, which represent the gradient component, and B-modes, which give the curl component. It is thought that B-modes are formed both from primordial fluctuations due tocosmic inflation , and fromgravitational lens ing of the CMB. As of 2008, only E-modes have been detected. QUIET aims to detect and characterize the B-modes polarization for the first time, and to provide more accurate measurements of the E-mode polarization.cite web | url=http://quiet.uchicago.edu/science/index.html | title=QUIET: Science | publisher=QUIET collaboration | date=27 January 2008 | accessdate=2008-05-24]B-modes are thought to be much fainter than E-modes, as they are formed by higher order effects. The ratio of the E-mode to B-mode polarization is currently unknown, and the minimum detectable value of this can be used as a measure of the sensitivity of a CMB instrument. For QUIET this value is r=0.009, which corresponds to the
energy scale ofcosmic inflation being aroundGeV .QUIET's measurements of the CMB's
power spectrum will be between themultipole s of about 40 and 2,500, and will be made in a section of the sky known to have low foreground contamination.References
Journal article
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