Design of the on-board data compression for the bolometer data of LiteBIRD
Mayu Tominaga, Masahiro Tsujimoto, Graeme Smecher, Hirokazu Ishino (on, behalf of LiteBIRD Joint study group)

TL;DR
LiteBIRD aims to detect primordial B-mode polarization in the CMB and requires efficient on-board data compression algorithms to handle the large data volume from thousands of bolometers, ensuring data transmission within limited bandwidth.
Contribution
This paper evaluates and proposes data compression algorithms tailored for LiteBIRD's on-board electronics to meet its high data rate and bandwidth constraints.
Findings
Achieved over 50% data compression ratio with selected algorithms.
Simulated realistic bolometer data including noise and glitches for evaluation.
Demonstrated feasibility of on-board compression for large-scale CMB observations.
Abstract
LiteBIRD is a space-borne experiment dedicated to detecting large-scale -mode anisotropies in the linear polarization of the Cosmic Microwave Background (CMB) predicted by the theory of inflation. It is planned to be launched in the late 2020s to the second Lagrange point (L2) of the Sun-Earth system. LiteBIRD will map the sky in 15 frequency bands. In comparison to HFI, the previous low-temperature bolometer-based satellite for CMB observations, the number of detector has increased by two orders of magnitude, up to 5000 detectors in total. The data rate is 19 Hz from each detector. The bandpass to the ground is limited to 10 Mbps using the X-band for a few hours per day. These require the data to be compressed by more than 50 %. The exact value depends on how much information entropy is contained in the real data. We have thus evaluated the compression by…
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.
