Measurements of the Intensity and Polarization of the Anomalous Microwave Emission in the Perseus molecular complex with QUIJOTE
R. G\'enova-Santos, J.A. Rubi\~no-Mart\'in, R. Rebolo, A., Pel\'aez-Santos, C.H. L\'opez-Caraballo, S. Harper, R.A. Watson, M. Ashdown,, R.B. Barreiro, B. Casaponsa, C. Dickinson, J.M. Diego, R. Fern\'andez-Cobos,, K.J.B. Grainge, D. Herranz, R. Hoyland, A. Lasenby

TL;DR
This study provides the most precise spectrum of anomalous microwave emission in the Perseus region, confirming its spectral downturn and setting new polarization constraints that challenge some emission models.
Contribution
It offers the first independent confirmation of the AME spectral downturn at low frequencies and presents new polarization upper limits in the 10-20 GHz range.
Findings
Most precise AME spectrum to date with 13 data points
Confirmed spectral downturn of AME at low frequencies
Set upper limits on polarization fraction, constraining emission models
Abstract
Anomalous microwave emission (AME) has been observed in numerous sky regions, in the frequency range ~10-60 GHz. One of the most scrutinized regions is G159.6-18.5, located within the Perseus molecular complex. In this paper we present further observations of this region (194 hours in total over ~250 deg^2), both in intensity and in polarization. They span four frequency channels between 10 and 20 GHz, and were gathered with QUIJOTE, a new CMB experiment with the goal of measuring the polarization of the CMB and Galactic foregrounds. When combined with other publicly-available intensity data, we achieve the most precise spectrum of the AME measured to date, with 13 independent data points being dominated by this emission. The four QUIJOTE data points provide the first independent confirmation of the downturn of the AME spectrum at low frequencies, initially unveiled by the COSMOSOMAS…
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