Systematic Effects in Interferometric Observations of the CMB Polarization
Ata Karakci, Le Zhang, P. M. Sutter, Emory F. Bunn, Andrei Korotkov,, Peter Timbie, Gregory S. Tucker, Benjamin D. Wandelt

TL;DR
This paper presents a comprehensive simulation pipeline for interferometric CMB polarization observations, analyzing systematic errors and their impact on detecting primordial B-modes, with methods to recover the tensor-to-scalar ratio within 10% accuracy.
Contribution
It introduces a complete simulation framework including systematic errors and compares two power spectrum estimation methods, providing guidelines for controlling systematics in CMB polarization experiments.
Findings
Both methods yield consistent power spectrum results.
Systematic errors must be controlled within specified precisions.
The experiment can detect B-modes at r=0.01 if systematics are managed properly.
Abstract
The detection of the primordial -mode spectrum of the polarized cosmic microwave background (CMB) signal may provide a probe of inflation. However, observation of such a faint signal requires excellent control of systematic errors. Interferometry proves to be a promising approach for overcoming such a challenge. In this paper we present a complete simulation pipeline of interferometric observations of CMB polarization, including systematic errors. We employ two different methods for obtaining the power spectra from mock data produced by simulated observations: the maximum likelihood method and the method of Gibbs sampling. We show that the results from both methods are consistent with each other, as well as, within a factor of 6, with analytical estimates. Several categories of systematic errors are considered: instrumental errors, consisting of antenna gain and antenna coupling…
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