An Overview of CHIME, the Canadian Hydrogen Intensity Mapping Experiment
The CHIME Collaboration: Mandana Amiri, Kevin Bandura, Anja Boskovic,, Tianyue Chen, Jean-Fran\c{c}ois Cliche, Meiling Deng, Nolan Denman, Matt, Dobbs, Mateus Fandino, Simon Foreman, Mark Halpern, David Hanna, Alex S., Hill, Gary Hinshaw, Carolin H\"ofer, Joseph Kania

TL;DR
CHIME is a large, innovative radio telescope designed to map neutral hydrogen across a broad redshift range, providing valuable data for understanding the universe's expansion and cosmic structure.
Contribution
This paper provides a comprehensive overview of CHIME's design, performance, and initial scientific results, highlighting its novel use of cylindrical reflectors and advanced correlator technology.
Findings
Successfully mapped sky regions, producing new cosmological data
Demonstrated effective calibration and beam characterization
Collected three years of science data for cosmological analysis
Abstract
The Canadian Hydrogen Intensity Mapping Experiment (CHIME) is a drift scan radio telescope operating across the 400-800 MHz band. CHIME is located at the Dominion Radio Astrophysical Observatory near Penticton, BC Canada. The instrument is designed to map neutral hydrogen over the redshift range 0.8 to 2.5 to constrain the expansion history of the Universe. This goal drives the design features of the instrument. CHIME consists of four parallel cylindrical reflectors, oriented north-south, each 100 m 20 m and outfitted with a 256 element dual-polarization linear feed array. CHIME observes a two degree wide stripe covering the entire meridian at any given moment, observing 3/4 of the sky every day due to Earth rotation. An FX correlator utilizes FPGAs and GPUs to digitize and correlate the signals, with different correlation products generated for cosmological, fast radio burst,…
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