The Atacama Cosmology Telescope: Beam Measurements and the Microwave Brightness Temperatures of Uranus and Saturn
Matthew Hasselfield, Kavilan Moodley, J. Richard Bond, Sudeep Das,, Mark J. Devlin, Joanna Dunkley, Rolando Dunner, Joseph W. Fowler, Patricio, Gallardo, Megan B. Gralla, Amir Hajian, Mark Halpern, Adam D. Hincks, Tobias, A. Marriage, Danica Marsden, Michael D. Niemack

TL;DR
This paper details the measurement of the Atacama Cosmology Telescope's beam profiles and window functions, and provides precise brightness temperatures of Uranus and Saturn at specific microwave frequencies, aiding CMB analysis.
Contribution
It introduces a method for accurate beam shape measurement and calibration of planetary brightness temperatures for the ACT, improving CMB data analysis accuracy.
Findings
Beam profiles characterized for multiple seasons and frequencies.
Precise brightness temperatures of Uranus and Saturn measured.
Beam correction methods improve angular power spectrum analysis.
Abstract
We describe the measurement of the beam profiles and window functions for the Atacama Cosmology Telescope (ACT), which operated from 2007 to 2010 with kilo-pixel bolometer arrays centered at 148, 218, and 277 GHz. Maps of Saturn are used to measure the beam shape in each array and for each season of observations. Radial profiles are transformed to Fourier space in a way that preserves the spatial correlations in the beam uncertainty, to derive window functions relevant for angular power spectrum analysis. Several corrections are applied to the resulting beam transforms, including an empirical correction measured from the final CMB survey maps to account for the effects of mild pointing variation and alignment errors. Observations of Uranus made regularly throughout each observing season are used to measure the effects of atmospheric opacity and to monitor deviations in telescope focus…
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