KISS: instrument description and performance
J. F. Mac\'ias-P\'erez, M. Fern\'andez-Torreiro, A. Catalano, A., Fasano, M. Aguiar, A. Beelen, A. Benoit, A. Bideaud, J. Bounmy, O. Bourrion,, M. Calvo, J. A. Castro-Almaz\'an, P. de Bernardis, M. de Petris, A. P. de, Taoro, G. Garde, R. T. G\'enova-Santos, A. Gomez

TL;DR
KISS is a millimetre camera using KID arrays and a Martin-Puplett interferometer, providing spectral data for astrophysical observations, with a developed data pipeline, despite some sensitivity limitations affecting galaxy cluster detection.
Contribution
This paper introduces the KISS instrument, detailing its design, calibration, data analysis pipeline, and demonstrating its capabilities and limitations for astrophysical observations.
Findings
Successful spectral observations of Moon, Jupiter, and Venus.
Identified a response deficit likely due to sub-optimal coupling.
Developed key technologies and data analysis procedures for KID interferometers.
Abstract
Kinetic inductance detectors (KIDs) have been proven as reliable systems for astrophysical observations, especially in the millimetre range. Their compact size enables to optimally fill the focal plane, thus boosting sensitivity. The KISS (KIDs Interferometric Spectral Surveyor) instrument is a millimetre camera that consists of two KID arrays of 316 pixels each coupled to a Martin-Puplett interferometer (MPI). The addition of the MPI grants the KIDs camera the ability to provide spectral information in the 100 and 300 GHz range. In this paper we report the main properties of the KISS instrument and its observations. We also describe the calibration and data analysis procedures used. We present a complete model of the observed data including the sky signal and several identified systematics. We have developed a full photometric and spectroscopic data analysis pipeline that translates…
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Taxonomy
TopicsMusic Technology and Sound Studies
