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      Broadband anti-reflective coatings for cosmic microwave background experiments

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          Abstract

          The desire for higher sensitivity has driven ground-based cosmic microwave background (CMB) experiments to employ ever larger focal planes, which in turn require larger reimaging optics. Practical limits to the maximum size of these optics motivates the development of quasi-optically-coupled (lenslet-coupled), multi-chroic detectors. These detectors can be sensitive across a broader bandwidth compared to waveguide-coupled detectors. However, the increase in bandwidth comes at a cost: the lenses (up to \(\sim\)700 mm diameter) and lenslets (\(\sim\)5 mm diameter, hemispherical lenses on the focal plane) used in these systems are made from high-refractive-index materials (such as silicon or amorphous aluminum oxide) that reflect nearly a third of the incident radiation. In order to maximize the faint CMB signal that reaches the detectors, the lenses and lenslets must be coated with an anti-reflective (AR) material. The AR coating must maximize radiation transmission in scientifically interesting bands and be cryogenically stable. Such a coating was developed for the third generation camera, SPT-3G, of the South Pole Telescope (SPT) experiment, but the materials and techniques used in the development are general to AR coatings for mm-wave optics. The three-layer polytetrafluoroethylene-based AR coating is broadband, inexpensive, and can be manufactured with simple tools. The coating is field tested; AR coated focal plane elements were deployed in the 2016-2017 austral summer and AR coated reimaging optics were deployed in 2017-2018.

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          A Flat Universe from High-Resolution Maps of the Cosmic Microwave Background Radiation

          The blackbody radiation left over from the Big Bang has been transformed by the expansion of the Universe into the nearly isotropic 2.73K Cosmic Microwave Background. Tiny inhomogeneities in the early Universe left their imprint on the microwave background in the form of small anisotropies in its temperature. These anisotropies contain information about basic cosmological parameters, particularly the total energy density and curvature of the universe. Here we report the first images of resolved structure in the microwave background anisotropies over a significant part of the sky. Maps at four frequencies clearly distinguish the microwave background from foreground emission. We compute the angular power spectrum of the microwave background, and find a peak at Legendre multipole \(\ell_{peak}=(197 \pm 6)\), with an amplitude \(DT_{200}=(69 \pm 8)\mu K\). This is consistent with that expected for cold dark matter models in a flat (euclidean) Universe, as favoured by standard inflationary scenarios.
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            Author and article information

            Journal
            31 August 2018
            Article
            10.1117/12.2315674
            1809.00030
            8f8dd3b7-f315-4457-ba02-39743a706aa6

            http://arxiv.org/licenses/nonexclusive-distrib/1.0/

            History
            Custom metadata
            Proceedings of SPIE Volume 10708, Millimeter, Submillimeter, and Far-Infrared Detectors and Instrumentation for Astronomy IX; 1070843 (2018)
            13 pages, 5 figures
            astro-ph.IM physics.ins-det

            Technical & Applied physics,Instrumentation & Methods for astrophysics
            Technical & Applied physics, Instrumentation & Methods for astrophysics

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