Development and application of metamaterial-based Half-Wave Plates for the NIKA and NIKA2 polarimeters
G. Pisano, A. Ritacco, A. Monfardini, C. Tucker, P.A.R. Ade, A., Shitvov, A. Benoit, M. Calvo, A. Catalano, J. Goupy, S. Leclercq, J., Macias-Perez, A. Andrianasolo, and N. Ponthieu

TL;DR
This paper presents the design, development, and application of large, lightweight, metamaterial-based Half-Wave Plates for millimeter-wave polarimeters NIKA and NIKA2, enabling improved polarization measurements in astrophysical observations.
Contribution
The paper introduces novel metamaterial HWPs with optimized electromagnetic properties for large-field millimeter-wave polarimetry, including dual-band operation for NIKA2.
Findings
Successfully developed large, lightweight HWPs meeting performance criteria
Achieved dual-band operation with optimized electromagnetic characteristics
Enhanced polarization measurement capabilities for astrophysical instruments
Abstract
CONTEXT.Large field-of-view imaging/polarimetry instruments operating at millimeter and submm wavelengths are fundamental tools to understand the role of magnetic fields (MF) in channeling filament material into prestellar cores providing a unique insight in the physics of galactic star-forming regions. Among other topics, at extra-galactic scales, polarization observations of AGNs will allow us to constrain the possible physical conditions of the emitting plasma from the jets and/or exploring the physics of dust inside supernova remnants. The kilo-pixel NIKA2 camera, installed at the IRAM 30-m telescope, represents today one of the best tools available to the astronomers to produce simultaneous intensity/polarimetry maps over large fields at 260 GHz (1.15 mm). AIMS.The polarization measurement, in NIKA and NIKA2, is achieved by rapidly modulating the total incoming polarization. This…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
