4.2 Article

Optical Design and Characterization of 40-GHz Detector and Module for the BICEP Array

Journal

JOURNAL OF LOW TEMPERATURE PHYSICS
Volume 199, Issue 3-4, Pages 1118-1126

Publisher

SPRINGER/PLENUM PUBLISHERS
DOI: 10.1007/s10909-019-02299-z

Keywords

BICEP array; Cosmology; Inflation; CMB; Antennas; Detectors; Polarization

Funding

  1. National Science Foundation [0742818, 0742592, 1044978, 1110087, 1145172, 1145143, 1145248, 1639040, 1638957, 1638978, 1638970, 1726917]
  2. JPL Research and Technology Development Fund
  3. NASA [06-ARPA206-0040, 10-SAT10-0017, 12-SAT12-0031, 14-SAT14-0009, 16SAT16-0002]
  4. Gordon and Betty Moore Foundation at Caltech
  5. Canada Foundation for Innovation grant
  6. FAS Science Division Research Computing Group at Harvard University
  7. US DoE Office of Science
  8. Keck Foundation
  9. STFC [ST/S00033X/1] Funding Source: UKRI

Ask authors/readers for more resources

Families of cosmic inflation models predict a primordial gravitational-wave background that imprints B-mode polarization pattern in the cosmic microwave background (CMB). High-sensitivity instruments with wide frequency coverage and well-controlled systematic errors are needed to constrain the faint B-mode amplitude. We have developed antenna-coupled transition edge sensor arrays for high-sensitivity polarized CMB observations over a wide range of millimeter-wave bands. BICEP array, the latest phase of the BICEP/Keck experiment series, is a multi-receiver experiment designed to search for inflationary B-mode polarization to a precision sigma(r) between 0.002 and 0.004 after 3 full years of observations, depending on foreground complexity and the degree of lensing removal. We describe the electromagnetic design and measured performance of BICEP array's low-frequency 40-GHz detector, their packaging in focal plane modules, and optical characterization including efficiency and beam matching between polarization pairs. We summarize the design and simulated optical performance, including an approach to improve the optical efficiency due to mismatch losses. We report the measured beam maps for a new broadband corrugation design to minimize beam differential ellipticity between polarization pairs caused by interactions with the module housing frame, which helps minimize polarized beam mismatch that converts CMB temperature to polarization (T -> P) anisotropy in CMB maps.

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