3.8 Proceedings Paper

The Primordial Inflation Explorer (PIXIE)

Publisher

SPIE-INT SOC OPTICAL ENGINEERING
DOI: 10.1117/12.2231090

Keywords

cosmic microwave background; polarimeter; spectral distortion; blackbody spectral distortions; Fourier transform spectrometer

Ask authors/readers for more resources

The Primordial fflation hxplorer is an plorer-class mission to open new windows, universe through measurements of the polarization and absolute frequency spectrum of the cosmic microwavebackground. PIXIE will measure the gravitational-wave signature of primordial inflation through its distinctive imprint in linear polarization, and characterize the thermal history of the universe through precision measurements of distortions itr the blackbody spectrum. PIXIE, 11S(-S an innovative optical design to achieve background limitedsensitivity in 400 spectral channels spanning over 7 octaves in frequency from 30 Gtilz to 6 cm to 50 micron wavelength). Multi-moded non-imaging optics feed a polarizing Fourier Transform Spectrometer to produce a set of interference fringes, proportional to the difference spectrum between orthogonal linear polarizations from the two input beams. Multiple levels of symmetry and signal modulation combine to reduce systematic errors to negligible levels. PIXIE will map the full sky in Stokes I, Q, and U parameters with angular resolution 2.6' and sensitivity 70 nK per l' square pixel. The principal science goal is the detection and characterization of linear polarization from an inflationary epoch in the early universe, with tensor-to-scalar ratio r < 10-3 at 5 standard deviations. The PIXIE mission complements anticipated ground-based polarization measurements such as CMBS4, providing a cosmic-variance-limited determination of the large-scale E-mode signal to measure the optical depth, constrain models of reionization, and provide a firm detection of the neutrino mass (the last unknown parameter in the Standard Model of particle physics). in addition, PIXIE: will measure the absolute frequency spectrum to characterize deviations from a blackbody with sensitivity 3 orders of magnitude beyond the seminal COBE/FIRAS limits. The sky cannot be black at this level; the expected results will constrain physical processes ranging from inflation to the nature of the first stars and the physical conditions within the interstellar medium of the Galaxy. We describe the PIXIE instrument and mission architecture required to measure the CMB to the limits imposed by astrophysical foregrounds.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

3.8
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available