The Simons Observatory: Instrument Overview
Nicholas Galitzki, Aamir Ali, Kam S. Arnold, Peter C. Ashton, Jason E., Austermann, Carlo Baccigalupi, Taylor Baildon, Darcy Barron, James A. Beall,, Shawn Beckman, Sarah Marie M. Bruno, Sean Bryan, Paolo G. Calisse, Grace E., Chesmore, Yuji Chinone, Steve K. Choi

TL;DR
The Simons Observatory will use advanced telescopes and detectors to make precise measurements of the cosmic microwave background, enabling new insights into cosmology and fundamental physics.
Contribution
This paper provides an overview of the innovative instrumentation and design of the Simons Observatory's telescopes and detectors for CMB measurements.
Findings
Deployment of over 60,000 detectors across multiple telescopes
Wide angular scale coverage from 1 arcminute to tens of degrees
Technical solutions for cryogenic receivers and optical components
Abstract
The Simons Observatory (SO) will make precise temperature and polarization measurements of the cosmic microwave background (CMB) using a set of telescopes which will cover angular scales between 1 arcminute and tens of degrees, contain over 60,000 detectors, and observe at frequencies between 27 and 270 GHz. SO will consist of a 6 m aperture telescope coupled to over 30,000 transition-edge sensor bolometers along with three 42 cm aperture refractive telescopes, coupled to an additional 30,000+ detectors, all of which will be located in the Atacama Desert at an altitude of 5190 m. The powerful combination of large and small apertures in a CMB observatory will allow us to sample a wide range of angular scales over a common survey area. SO will measure fundamental cosmological parameters of our universe, constrain primordial fluctuations, find high redshift clusters via the…
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