Impact of modulation on CMB B-mode polarization experiments
Michael L. Brown, Anthony Challinor, Chris E. North, Bradley R., Johnson, Daniel O'Dea, David Sutton

TL;DR
This study evaluates how different polarization modulation strategies affect the ability of ground-based CMB B-mode experiments to detect gravitational waves, considering various systematic effects through simulations.
Contribution
It provides a comparative analysis of slow and fast polarization modulation impacts on B-mode detection, highlighting their benefits and limitations in realistic observational conditions.
Findings
Fast modulation helps mitigate low-frequency detector noise.
Modulation reduces impact of instrumental polarization.
Systematic errors like polarization mis-calibration cause significant E-B mixing.
Abstract
We investigate the impact of both slow and fast polarization modulation strategies on the science return of upcoming ground-based experiments aimed at measuring the B-mode polarization of the CMB. Using simulations of the Clover experiment, we compare the ability of modulated and un-modulated observations to recover the signature of gravitational waves in the polarized CMB sky in the presence of a number of anticipated systematic effects. The general expectations that fast modulation is helpful in mitigating low-frequency detector noise, and that the additional redundancy in the projection of the instrument's polarization sensitivity directions onto the sky when modulating reduces the impact of instrumental polarization, are borne out by our simulations. Neither low-frequency polarized atmospheric fluctuations nor systematic errors in the polarization sensitivity directions are…
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