Seven-Year Wilkinson Microwave Anisotropy Probe (WMAP) Observations: Galactic Foreground Emission
B. Gold, N. Odegard, J. L. Weiland, R. S. Hill, A. Kogut, C. L., Bennett, G. Hinshaw, X. Chen, J. Dunkley, M. Halpern, N. Jarosik, E. Komatsu,, D. Larson, M. Limon, S. S. Meyer, M. R. Nolta, L. Page, K. M. Smith, D. N., Spergel, G. S. Tucker, E. Wollack, E. L. Wright

TL;DR
This paper updates estimates of Galactic foreground emission using seven years of WMAP data, assesses contamination levels, and refines the cosmic microwave background map, providing insights into foreground modeling and emission mechanisms.
Contribution
It introduces improved foreground masks, updated point source catalogs, and tests of foreground fitting methods against systematics and beam asymmetry.
Findings
No significant foreground contamination outside the mask.
A 15 microKelvin upper bound on residual foreground contamination.
Spinning dust or steepening synchrotron models fit the data well.
Abstract
[Abridged] We present updated estimates of Galactic foreground emission using seven years of WMAP data. Using the power spectrum of differences between multi-frequency template-cleaned maps, we find no evidence for foreground contamination outside of the updated (KQ85y7) foreground mask. We place a 15 microKelvin upper bound on rms foreground contamination in the cleaned maps used for cosmological analysis. We find no indication in the polarization data of an extra "haze" of hard synchrotron emission from energetic electrons near the Galactic center. We provide an updated map of the cosmic microwave background (CMB) using the internal linear combination (ILC) method, updated foreground masks, and updates to point source catalogs with 62 newly detected sources. Also new are tests of the Markov chain Monte Carlo (MCMC) foreground fitting procedure against systematics in the time-stream…
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