The Southern Twenty-centimetre All-sky Polarization Survey (STAPS): survey description and maps
Xiaohui Sun (YNU), Marijke Haverkorn (Radboud Uni), Ettore Carretti, (INAF), Tom Landecker (DRAO), B. M. Gaensler (UC Santa Cruz), Sergio Poppi, (INAF), Lister Staveley-Smith (ICRAR), Xuyang Gao (NAOC), Jinlin Han (NAOC)

TL;DR
STAPS provides comprehensive, calibrated polarization maps of the southern sky at 1.3-1.8 GHz, enabling detailed studies of the Galactic magnetic field and interstellar medium through advanced data processing and validation techniques.
Contribution
This work introduces the first large-scale, absolutely calibrated polarization survey of the southern sky at 1.3-1.8 GHz, with detailed data processing and validation methods.
Findings
High-quality polarization maps with low noise levels.
Validated flux density and Faraday rotation measurements.
Enhanced understanding of the Galactic magnetic field.
Abstract
We present data processing and verification of the Southern Twenty-centimetre All-sky Polarization Survey (STAPS) conducted with Murriyang, the Parkes 64-m telescope. The survey covers the sky area of -89<Dec<0 and the frequency range of 1.3-1.8 GHz split into 1-MHz channels. STAPS was observed commensally with the S-band Polarization All-Sky Survey (S-PASS). The survey is composed of long azimuth scans, which allows us to absolutely calibrate Stokes Q and U with the data processing procedure developed for S-PASS. We obtain I, Q, and U maps in both flux density scale (Jy/beam) and main beam brightness temperature scale (K), for the 301 frequency channels with sufficiently good data. The temperature scale is tied to the Global Magneto-ionic Medium Survey (GMIMS) high-band north sky survey conducted with the Dominion Radio Astrophysical Observatory 26-m telescope. All the STAPS maps are…
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.
Taxonomy
TopicsAstronomical Observations and Instrumentation · Scientific Research and Discoveries · Astronomy and Astrophysical Research
