English

Destriping Cosmic Microwave Background Polarimeter data

Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics 2013-11-11 v2 Cosmology and Nongalactic Astrophysics

Abstract

Destriping is a well-established technique for removing low-frequency correlated noise from Cosmic Microwave Background (CMB) survey data. In this paper we present a destriping algorithm tailored to data from a polarimeter, i.e. an instrument where each channel independently measures the polarization of the input signal. We also describe a fully parallel implementation in Python released as Free Software and analyze its results and performance on simulated datasets, both the design case of signal and correlated noise, and with additional systematic effects. Finally we apply the algorithm to 30 days of 37.5 GHz polarized microwave data gathered from the B-Machine experiment, developed at UCSB. The B-Machine data and destriped maps are made publicly available. The purpose is the development of a scalable software tool to be applied to the upcoming 12 months of temperature and polarization data from LATTE (Low frequency All sky TemperaTure Experiment) at 8 GHz and to even larger datasets.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.1309.5609,
  title  = {Destriping Cosmic Microwave Background Polarimeter data},
  author = {Andrea Zonca and Brian Williams and Peter Meinhold and Philip Lubin},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:1309.5609},
  year   = {2013}
}

Comments

Submitted to Astronomy and Computing on 15th August 2013, published 7th November 2013

R2 v1 2026-06-22T01:31:46.711Z