The 2.3 GHz continuum survey of the GEM project
C. Tello (1), T. Villela (1), S. Torres (2), M. Bersanelli (3), G. F., Smoot (4, 5), I. S. Ferreira (6), A. Cingoz (5), J. Lamb (7), D. Barbosa, (8), D. Perez-Becker (5, 9), S. Ricciardi (4, 10), J. A. Currivan (5),, P. Platania (11), D. Maino (3) ((1) INPE - Brazil

TL;DR
This paper presents a large-scale 2.3 GHz radio continuum survey of the sky, mapping Galactic synchrotron emission with high calibration accuracy, and compares it with existing surveys to analyze spectral index variations.
Contribution
It provides the first partial-sky survey at 2.3 GHz with detailed calibration, destriping, and systematic error analysis, expanding the frequency coverage of Galactic emission mapping.
Findings
66% sky coverage achieved from DEC -51.73° to +34.78°
Zero-level uncertainty of 103 mK and 5% temperature scale error
Spectral index steepens from high to low emission regions
Abstract
We present a partial-sky survey of the radio continuum at 2.3 GHz within the scope of the Galactic Emission Mapping (GEM) project, an observational program conceived and developed to reveal the large-scale properties of Galactic synchrotron radiation through a set of self-consistent surveys of the radio continuum between 408 MHz and 10 GHz. The GEM experiment uses a portable and double-shielded 5.5-m radiotelescope in altazimuthal configuration to map 60-degree-wide declination bands from different observational sites by circularly scanning the sky at zenithal angles of 30 deg from a constantly rotating platform. The observations were accomplished with a total power receiver, whose front-end High Electron Mobility Transistor (HEMT) amplifier was matched directly to a cylindrical horn at the prime focus of the parabolic reflector. The Moon was used to calibrate the antenna temperature…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
Taxonomy
TopicsRadio Astronomy Observations and Technology · Astrophysics and Cosmic Phenomena · Particle Accelerators and Free-Electron Lasers
