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The TopHat Experiment: A Balloon-borne Instrument for Mapping Millimeter and Submillimeter Emission

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© 2005. The American Astronomical Society. All rights reserved. Printed in U.S.A.
, , Citation R. F. Silverberg et al 2005 ApJS 160 59 DOI 10.1086/432117

0067-0049/160/1/59

Abstract

The TopHat experiment was designed to measure the anisotropy in the cosmic microwave background radiation on angular scales from 0fdg3 to 30° and the thermal emission from both Galactic and extragalactic dust. The balloon-borne instrument had five spectral bands spanning frequencies from 175 to 630 GHz. The telescope was a compact, 1 m, on-axis Cassegrain telescope designed to scan the sky at a fixed elevation of 78°. The radiometer used cryogenic bolometers coupled to a single feed horn via a dichroic filter system. The observing strategy was intended to efficiently cover a region 48° in diameter centered on the south polar cap with a highly cross-linked and redundant pattern with nearly uniform sky coverage. The Long Duration Balloon flight over Antarctica in 2001 January surveyed about 6% of the sky. Here we describe the design of the instrument and the achieved in-flight performance and provide a brief discussion of the data analysis.

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10.1086/432117