Seven-Year Wilkinson Microwave Anisotropy Probe (WMAP) Observations: Planets and Celestial Calibration Sources
J. L. Weiland (1), N. Odegard (1), R. S. Hill (1), E. Wollack (2), G., Hinshaw (2), M. R. Greason (1), N. Jarosik (3), L. Page (3), C. L. Bennett, (4), J. Dunkley (5), B. Gold (4), M. Halpern (6), A. Kogut (2), E. Komatsu, (7), D. Larson (4), M. Limon (8), S. S. Meyer (9)

TL;DR
This paper presents seven-year WMAP observations of planets and celestial sources, providing refined temperature measurements, polarization data, and variability analysis to improve calibration accuracy at microwave frequencies.
Contribution
It offers updated flux densities, temperature measurements, and variability analysis for calibration sources, along with models for planetary brightness variations over seven years.
Findings
WMAP Jupiter temperatures agree with previous five-year data within 1-sigma.
Detected secular decrease in flux for Cas A (~0.53%/year) and Tau A (~0.22%/year).
Mars and Saturn brightness models fit WMAP data within 2-3% accuracy.
Abstract
(Abridged) We present WMAP seven-year observations of bright sources which are often used as calibrators at microwave frequencies. Ten objects are studied in five frequency bands (23 - 94 GHz): the outer planets (Mars, Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus and Neptune) and five fixed celestial sources (Cas A, Tau A, Cyg A, 3C274 and 3C58). The seven-year analysis of Jupiter provides temperatures which are within 1-sigma of the previously published WMAP five-year values, with slightly tighter constraints on variability with orbital phase, and limits (but no detections) on linear polarization. Scaling factors are provided which, when multiplied by the Wright Mars thermal model predictions at 350 micron, reproduce WMAP seasonally averaged observations of Mars within ~2%. An empirical model is described which fits brightness variations of Saturn due to geometrical effects and can be used to predict the…
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