Measuring Planck beams with planets
K.M. Huffenberger, B.P. Crill, A.E. Lange, K.M. Gorski, C.R. Lawrence

TL;DR
This paper investigates how well the Planck satellite can determine its instrument beam shape using planet observations, employing simulations and various reconstruction techniques to assess impacts on CMB measurements and cosmological parameters.
Contribution
It develops and compares parametric and non-parametric methods for beam reconstruction from simulated planet data, evaluating their accuracy and implications for cosmological parameter estimation.
Findings
Single Jupiter transits can measure beam window functions to better than 0.3%.
Optical modeling significantly improves beam reconstruction quality.
Beam errors can impact the measurement of the spectral index n_s.
Abstract
Accurate measurement of the cosmic microwave background (CMB) anisotropy requires precise knowledge of the instrument beam. We explore how well the Planck beams will be determined from observations of planets, developing techniques that are also appropriate for other experiments. We simulate planet observations with a Planck-like scanning strategy, telescope beams, noise, and detector properties. Then we employ both parametric and non-parametric techniques, reconstructing beams directly from the time-ordered data. With a faithful parameterization of the beam shape, we can constrain certain detector properties, such as the time constants of the detectors, to high precision. Alternatively, we decompose the beam using an orthogonal basis. For both techniques, we characterize the errors in the beam reconstruction with Monte Carlo realizations. For a simplified scanning strategy, we study…
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Taxonomy
TopicsRelativity and Gravitational Theory · Radioactive Decay and Measurement Techniques · Cosmology and Gravitation Theories
