Instrument Overview of Taurus: A Balloon-borne CMB and Dust Polarization Experiment
Jared L. May, Alexandre E. Adler, Jason E. Austermann, Steven J., Benton, Rick Bihary, Malcolm Durkin, Shannon M. Duff, Jeffrey P. Filippini,, Aurelien A. Fraisse, Thomas J.L.J. Gascard, Sho M. Gibbs, Suren Gourapura,, Jon E. Gudmundsson, John W. Hartley, Johannes Hubmayr

TL;DR
Taurus is a balloon-borne CMB experiment designed to map large-scale polarization and Galactic foregrounds, improving measurements of reionization and neutrino masses while testing cosmological models.
Contribution
This paper presents the instrument design and overview of Taurus, a new balloon-borne experiment with advanced detectors and optimized for large-scale polarization measurements.
Findings
Over 10,000 transition edge sensor bolometers deployed
Achieves high-fidelity polarization measurements on large angular scales
Provides high-frequency polarized dust maps for the CMB community
Abstract
Taurus is a balloon-borne cosmic microwave background (CMB) experiment optimized to map the E-mode polarization and Galactic foregrounds at the largest angular scales ( 30) and improve measurements of the optical depth to reionization (). This will pave the way for improved measurements of the sum of neutrino masses in combination with high-resolution CMB data while also testing the model on large angular scales and providing high-frequency maps of polarized dust foregrounds to the CMB community. These measurements take advantage of the low-loading environment found in the stratosphere and are enabled by NASA's super-pressure balloon platform, which provides access to 70% of the sky with a launch from Wanaka, New Zealand. Here we describe a general overview of Taurus, with an emphasis on the instrument design. Taurus will employ more than 10,000 100 mK…
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Taxonomy
TopicsPlanetary Science and Exploration · Spacecraft Design and Technology · Geophysics and Gravity Measurements
