The Simons Observatory: Science goals and forecasts
The Simons Observatory Collaboration: Peter Ade, James Aguirre,, Zeeshan Ahmed, Simone Aiola, Aamir Ali, David Alonso, Marcelo A. Alvarez, Kam, Arnold, Peter Ashton, Jason Austermann, Humna Awan, Carlo Baccigalupi, Taylor, Baildon, Darcy Barron, Nick Battaglia, Richard Battye

TL;DR
The Simons Observatory aims to measure the cosmic microwave background with high precision across multiple frequencies to improve understanding of fundamental cosmological parameters, primordial perturbations, and galaxy evolution.
Contribution
This paper details the design, scientific goals, and performance forecasts of the new Simons Observatory, including its instrumentation and expected scientific impact.
Findings
Forecasts a measurement of the tensor-to-scalar ratio with σ(r)=0.003.
Maps 10% of the sky with 2 μK-arcmin noise in key frequency bands.
Provides a catalog of 16,000 galaxy clusters and 20,000 extragalactic sources.
Abstract
The Simons Observatory (SO) is a new cosmic microwave background experiment being built on Cerro Toco in Chile, due to begin observations in the early 2020s. We describe the scientific goals of the experiment, motivate the design, and forecast its performance. SO will measure the temperature and polarization anisotropy of the cosmic microwave background in six frequency bands: 27, 39, 93, 145, 225 and 280 GHz. The initial configuration of SO will have three small-aperture 0.5-m telescopes (SATs) and one large-aperture 6-m telescope (LAT), with a total of 60,000 cryogenic bolometers. Our key science goals are to characterize the primordial perturbations, measure the number of relativistic species and the mass of neutrinos, test for deviations from a cosmological constant, improve our understanding of galaxy evolution, and constrain the duration of reionization. The SATs will target the…
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