Observing CMB polarisation through ice

Ice crystal clouds in the upper troposphere can generate polarisation signals at the uK level. This signal can seriously affect very sensitive ground based searches for E- and B-mode of Cosmic Microwave Background polarisation. In this paper we estimate this effect within the ClOVER experiment obser...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Pietranera, Luca, Buhler, Stefan, Calisse, Paolo G., Emde, Claudia, Hayton, Darren, John, Viju Oommen, Maffei, Bruno, Piccirillo, Lucio, Pisano, Giampaolo, Savini, Giorgio, Sreerekha, T. R.
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Published: arXiv 2006
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Online Access:https://dx.doi.org/10.48550/arxiv.astro-ph/0611678
https://arxiv.org/abs/astro-ph/0611678
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Summary:Ice crystal clouds in the upper troposphere can generate polarisation signals at the uK level. This signal can seriously affect very sensitive ground based searches for E- and B-mode of Cosmic Microwave Background polarisation. In this paper we estimate this effect within the ClOVER experiment observing bands (97, 150 and 220 GHz) for the selected observing site (Llano de Chajnantor, Atacama desert, Chile). The results show that the polarisation signal from the clouds can be of the order of or even bigger than the CMB expected polarisation. Climatological data suggest that this signal is fairly constant over the whole year in Antarctica. On the other hand the stronger seasonal variability in Atacama allows for a 50% of clean observations during the dry season. : 7 Pages, 4 figures