A degree-scale measurement of anisotropy of the cosmic background radiation

We report on the preliminary result of a search for anisotropy in the cosmic background radiation (CBR) with a beam size of about 1.5 deg FWHM over a wavelength range of 8-12 mm. The system operated successfully for 500 hr at the South Pole during the 1990-1991 austral summer. The data from one regi...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Gaier, Todd, Schuster, Jeffrey, Gundersen, Joshua, Koch, Timothy, Seiffert, Michael, Meinhold, Peter, Lubin, Philip
Format: Other/Unknown Material
Language:unknown
Published: 1992
Subjects:
90
Online Access:http://ntrs.nasa.gov/search.jsp?R=19930026614
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Summary:We report on the preliminary result of a search for anisotropy in the cosmic background radiation (CBR) with a beam size of about 1.5 deg FWHM over a wavelength range of 8-12 mm. The system operated successfully for 500 hr at the South Pole during the 1990-1991 austral summer. The data from one region, representing 25 hr after editing, are presented here. A strong signal is present in the lower frequency channels with a spectrum unlike CBR fluctuations, and is probably due to foreground emission. The highest frequency channel has the smallest contribution from this signal and has been used to set a 95-percent confidence level upper limit of not greater than 1.4 x 10 exp -5 for fluctuations with a Gaussian autocorrelation function at a coherence angle of 1.2 deg. This is significantly more sensitive than previous experiments at this angle scale.