4.6 Article

Planck 2013 results. VII. HFI time response and beams

Journal

ASTRONOMY & ASTROPHYSICS
Volume 571, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

EDP SCIENCES S A
DOI: 10.1051/0004-6361/201321535

Keywords

cosmic background radiation; cosmology: observations; instrumentation: detectors; surveys

Funding

  1. ESA
  2. CNES (France)
  3. CNRS/INSU-IN2P3-INP (France)
  4. ASI (Italy)
  5. CNR (Italy)
  6. INAF (Italy)
  7. NASA (USA)
  8. DoE (USA)
  9. STFC (UK)
  10. UKSA (UK)
  11. CSIC (Spain)
  12. MICINN (Spain)
  13. JA (Spain)
  14. RES (Spain)
  15. Tekes (Finland)
  16. AoF (Finland)
  17. CSC (Finland)
  18. DLR (Germany)
  19. MPG (Germany)
  20. CSA (Canada)
  21. DTU Space (Denmark)
  22. SER/SSO (Switzerland)
  23. RCN (Norway)
  24. SFI (Ireland)
  25. FCT/MCTES (Portugal)
  26. PRACE (EU)
  27. STFC [ST/I005765/1, ST/L001314/1] Funding Source: UKRI
  28. Science and Technology Facilities Council [ST/L001314/1, ST/L000636/1, ST/I002006/1, ST/K000985/1, ST/L000768/1, ST/K004131/1, ST/K00106X/1, ST/I005765/1, ST/J001368/1, ST/K001051/1] Funding Source: researchfish
  29. UK Space Agency [ST/M007685/1, ST/K003674/1, ST/J004812/1, ST/G003874/1, ST/H001239/1] Funding Source: researchfish

Ask authors/readers for more resources

This paper characterizes the effective beams, the effective beam window functions and the associated errors for the Planck High Frequency Instrument (HFI) detectors. The effective beam is the angular response including the effect of the optics, detectors, data processing and the scan strategy. The window function is the representation of this beam in the harmonic domain which is required to recover an unbiased measurement of the cosmic microwave background angular power spectrum. The HFI is a scanning instrument and its effective beams are the convolution of: a) the optical response of the telescope and feeds; b) the processing of the time-ordered data and deconvolution of the bolometric and electronic transfer function; and c) the merging of several surveys to produce maps. The time response transfer functions are measured using observations of Jupiter and Saturn and by minimizing survey difference residuals. The scanning beam is the post-deconvolution angular response of the instrument, and is characterized with observations of Mars. The main beam solid angles are determined to better than 0.5% at each HFI frequency band. Observations of Jupiter and Saturn limit near sidelobes (within 5 degrees) to about 0.1% of the total solid angle. Time response residuals remain as long tails in the scanning beams, but contribute less than 0.1% of the total solid angle. The bias and uncertainty in the beam products are estimated using ensembles of simulated planet observations that include the impact of instrumental noise and known systematic effects. The correlation structure of these ensembles is well-described by five errors eigenmodes that are sub-dominant to sample variance and instrumental noise in the harmonic domain. A suite of consistency tests provide confidence that the error model represents a sufficient description of the data. The total error in the effective beam window functions is below 1% at 100 GHz up to multiple l similar to 1500, below 0.5% at 143 and 217 GHz up to l similar to 2000.

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