Denis Barkats
European Southern Observatory
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Featured researches published by Denis Barkats.
The Astrophysical Journal | 2015
Crystal Lee Brogan; Laura M. Pérez; Todd R. Hunter; William R. F. Dent; A. S. Hales; Richard E. Hills; Stuartt A. Corder; Edward B. Fomalont; C. Vlahakis; Yoshiharu Asaki; Denis Barkats; A. Hirota; J. A. Hodge; C. M. V. Impellizzeri; R. Kneissl; E. Liuzzo; R. Lucas; N. Marcelino; Satoki Matsushita; K. Nakanishi; N. Phillips; A. M. S. Richards; I. Toledo; R. Aladro; D. Broguiere; J. R. Cortes; Paulo C. Cortes; Daniel Espada; F. Galarza; D. Garcia Appadoo
We present Atacama Large Millimeter/submillimeter Array (ALMA) observations from the 2014 Long Baseline Campaign in dust continuum and spectral line emission from the HL Tau region. The continuum images at wavelengths of 2.9, 1.3, and 0.87 mm have unprecedented angular resolutions of 0. ′′ 075 (10 AU) to 0. ′′ 025 (3.5 AU), revealing an astonishing level of detail in the cir cumstellar disk surrounding the young solar analogue HL Tau, with a pattern of bright and dark rings observed at all wavelengths. By fitting ellipses to the most distinct rings, we measure precise values for the disk inclination (46.72 ◦ ± 0.05 ◦ ) and position angle (+138.02 ◦ ± 0.07 ◦ ). We obtain a high-fidelity image of the 1.0 mm spectral index (�), which ranges from � � 2.0 in the optically-thick central peak and two brightest ring s, increasing to 2.3-3.0 in the dark rings. The dark rings are not devoid of emission, and we estimate a grain emissivity index of 0.8 for the innermost dark ring and lower for subsequent dark rings, consistent with some degree of grain growth and evolution. Additional clues that the rings arise from planet formation incl ude an increase in their central offsets with radius and the presence of numerous orbital resonances. At a resolution of 35 AU, we resolve the molecular component of the disk in HCO + (1-0) which exhibits a pattern over LSR velocities from 2-12 km s -1 consistent with Keplerian motion around a �1.3M⊙ star, although complicated by absorption at low blue-shifted velocities. We also serendipitously detect and resolve the nearby protost ars XZ Tau (A/B) and LkH�358 at 2.9 mm. Subject headings: stars: individual (HL Tau, XZ Tau, LkH�358) — protoplanetary disks — stars: formation — submillimeter: planetary systems — techniques: interferometric
The Astrophysical Journal | 2014
Peter A. R. Ade; R. W. Aikin; M. Amiri; Denis Barkats; S. J. Benton; C. A. Bischoff; J. J. Bock; J. A. Brevik; I. Buder; E. Bullock; G. R. Davis; P. K. Day; C. D. Dowell; L. Duband; J. Filippini; S. Fliescher; S. R. Golwala; M. Halpern; M. Hasselfield; S. R. Hildebrandt; G. C. Hilton; K. D. Irwin; K. S. Karkare; J. P. Kaufman; Brian Keating; S. A. Kernasovskiy; J. M. Kovac; Chao-Lin Kuo; Erik M. Leitch; Nuria Llombart
We report on the design and performance of the BICEP2 instrument and on its three-year data set. BICEP2 was designed to measure the polarization of the cosmic microwave background (CMB) on angular scales of 1°-5°(l = 40-200), near the expected peak of the B-mode polarization signature of primordial gravitational waves from cosmic inflation. Measuring B-modes requires dramatic improvements in sensitivity combined with exquisite control of systematics. The BICEP2 telescope observed from the South Pole with a 26 cm aperture and cold, on-axis, refractive optics. BICEP2 also adopted a new detector design in which beam-defining slot antenna arrays couple to transition-edge sensor (TES) bolometers, all fabricated on a common substrate. The antenna-coupled TES detectors supported scalable fabrication and multiplexed readout that allowed BICEP2 to achieve a high detector count of 500 bolometers at 150 GHz, giving unprecedented sensitivity to B-modes at degree angular scales. After optimization of detector and readout parameters, BICEP2 achieved an instrument noise-equivalent temperature of
The Astrophysical Journal | 2015
Peter A. R. Ade; Z. Ahmed; R. W. Aikin; K. D. Alexander; Denis Barkats; S. J. Benton; C. A. Bischoff; J. J. Bock; J. A. Brevik; I. Buder; E. Bullock; V. Buza; J. Connors; B. P. Crill; C. D. Dowell; Cora Dvorkin; L. Duband; J. Filippini; S. Fliescher; S. R. Golwala; M. Halpern; S. Harrison; M. Hasselfield; S. R. Hildebrandt; G. C. Hilton; V. V. Hristov; H. Hui; K. D. Irwin; K. S. Karkare; J. P. Kaufman
15.8\ \mu \mathrm{K}\sqrt{\mathrm{s}}
The Astrophysical Journal | 2014
Denis Barkats; R. W. Aikin; C. A. Bischoff; I. Buder; J. P. Kaufman; Brian Keating; J. M. Kovac; Meng Su; Peter A. R. Ade; J. Battle; E. M. Bierman; J. J. Bock; H. C. Chiang; C. D. Dowell; L. Duband; J. P. Filippini; E. Hivon; W. L. Holzapfel; V. V. Hristov; W. C. Jones; C. L. Kuo; E. M. Leitch; P. Mason; T. Matsumura; H. T. Nguyen; N. Ponthieu; C. Pryke; S. Richter; G. Rocha; C. Sheehy
. The full data set reached Stokes Q and U map depths of 87.2 nK in square-degree pixels (5farcm2 μK) over an effective area of 384 deg2 within a 1000 deg2 field. These are the deepest CMB polarization maps at degree angular scales to date. The power spectrum analysis presented in a companion paper has resulted in a significant detection of B-mode polarization at degree scales.
The Astrophysical Journal | 2015
Peter A. R. Ade; R. W. Aikin; Denis Barkats; S. J. Benton; C. A. Bischoff; J. J. Bock; K. J. Bradford; J. A. Brevik; I. Buder; E. Bullock; C. D. Dowell; L. Duband; J. Filippini; S. Fliescher; S. R. Golwala; M. Halpern; M. Hasselfield; S. R. Hildebrandt; G. C. Hilton; H. Hui; K. D. Irwin; Ju-Hyung Kang; K. S. Karkare; J. P. Kaufman; Brian Keating; S. Kefeli; S. A. Kernasovskiy; J. M. Kovac; Chao-Lin Kuo; Erik M. Leitch
The Keck Array is a system of cosmic microwave background polarimeters, each similar to the Bicep2 experiment. In this paper we report results from the 2012 to 2013 observing seasons, during which the Keck Array consisted of five receivers all operating in the same (150 GHz) frequency band and observing field as Bicep2. We again find an excess of B-mode power over the lensed-ΛCDM expectation of >5σ in the range 30 6σ.
The Astrophysical Journal | 2015
Peter A. R. Ade; R. W. Aikin; M. Amiri; Denis Barkats; S. J. Benton; C. A. Bischoff; J. J. Bock; J. A. Bonetti; J. A. Brevik; I. Buder; E. Bullock; Goutam Chattopadhyay; G. R. Davis; P. K. Day; C. D. Dowell; L. Duband; J. Filippini; S. Fliescher; S. R. Golwala; M. Halpern; M. Hasselfield; S. R. Hildebrandt; G. C. Hilton; V. V. Hristov; H. Hui; K. D. Irwin; W. C. Jones; K. S. Karkare; J. P. Kaufman; Brian Keating
BICEP1 is a millimeter-wavelength telescope designed specifically to measure the inflationary B-mode polarization of the Cosmic Microwave Background (CMB) at degree angular scales. We present results from an analysis of the data acquired during three seasons of observations at the South Pole (2006 to 2008). This work extends the two-year result published in Chiang et al. (2010), with additional data from the third season and relaxed detector-selection criteria. This analysis also int roduces a more comprehensive estimation of band-power window functions, improved likelihood estimation methods and a new technique for deprojecting monopole temperature-to-polarization leakage which reduces this class of systematic uncertainty to a negligible level. We present maps of temperature, E- and B-mode polarization, and their associated angular power spectra. The improvement in the map noise level and polarization spectra error bars are consistent with the 52% increase in integration time relative to Chiang et al. (2010). We confirm both self-consistency of the polarization data and consistency with the two-year results. We measure the angular power spectra at 21 ≤ l ≤ 335 and find that the EE spectrum is consistent with Lambda Cold Dark Matter (�CDM) cosmology, with the first acoustic peak of the EE spectrum now detected at 15σ. The BB spectrum remains consistent with zero. From B-modes only, we constrain the tensor-to-scalar ratio to r = 0.03 +0.27 -0.23, or r < 0.70 at 95% confidence level.
The Astrophysical Journal | 2015
Alma Partnership; Todd R. Hunter; R. Kneissl; Arielle Moullet; Crystal Lee Brogan; Edward B. Fomalont; C. Vlahakis; Yoshiharu Asaki; Denis Barkats; William R. F. Dent; Richard E. Hills; A. Hirota; J. A. Hodge; C. M. V. Impellizzeri; E. Liuzzo; R. Lucas; N. Marcelino; Satoki Matsushita; K. Nakanishi; Laura M. Pérez; N. Phillips; A. M. S. Richards; I. Toledo; R. Aladro; D. Broguiere; J. R. Cortes; Paulo C. Cortes; Daniel Espada; F. Galarza; D. Garcia-Appadoo
bicep2 and the Keck Array are polarization-sensitive microwave telescopes that observe the cosmic microwave background (CMB) from the South Pole at degree angular scales in search of a signature of inflation imprinted as B-mode polarization in the CMB. bicep2 was deployed in late 2009, observed for three years until the end of 2012 at 150 GHz with 512 antenna-coupled transition edge sensor bolometers, and has reported a detection of B-mode polarization on degree angular scales. The Keck Array was first deployed in late 2010 and will observe through 2016 with five receivers at several frequencies (95, 150, and 220 GHz). bicep2 and the Keck Array share a common optical design and employ the field-proven bicep1 strategy of using small-aperture, cold, on-axis refractive optics, providing excellent control of systematics while maintaining a large field of view. This design allows for full characterization of far-field optical performance using microwave sources on the ground. Here we describe the optical design of both instruments and report a full characterization of the optical performance and beams of bicep2 and the Keck Array at 150 GHz.
Proceedings of SPIE | 2012
Emmanuel Pietriga; Pierre Cubaud; Joseph Schwarz; Romain Primet; Marcus Schilling; Denis Barkats; Emilio Barrios; Baltasar Vila Vilaro
We have developed antenna-coupled transition-edge sensor bolometers for a wide range of cosmic microwave background (CMB) polarimetry experiments, including Bicep2, Keck Array, and the balloon borne Spider. These detectors have reached maturity and this paper reports on their design principles, overall performance, and key challenges associated with design and production. Our detector arrays repeatedly produce spectral bands with 20%–30% bandwidth at 95, 150, or 230 GHz. The integrated antenna arrays synthesize symmetric co-aligned beams with controlled side-lobe levels. Cross-polarized response on boresight is typically
Proceedings of SPIE | 2010
Tomotake Matsumura; Peter A. R. Ade; Denis Barkats; D. Barron; J. Battle; E. M. Bierman; James J. Bock; H. Cynthia Chiang; Brendan Crill; C. Darren Dowell; L. Duband; E. Hivon; W. L. Holzapfel; Viktor V. Hristov; W. C. Jones; Brian Keating; J. M. Kovac; Chao-Lin Kuo; A. E. Lange; Erik M. Leitch; Peter Mason; Hien T. Nguyen; N. Ponthieu; C. Pryke; Steffen Richter; Graca Rocha; Yuki D. Takahashi; K. W. Yoon
\sim 0.5\%
arXiv: Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics | 2018
Michael Crumrine; Peter A. R. Ade; Z. Ahmed; Randol Aikin; K. D. Alexander; Denis Barkats; S. J. Benton; C. A. Bischoff; J. J. Bock; R. Bowens-Rubin; J. A. Brevik; I. Buder; E. Bullock; V. Buza; J. Connors; James Cornelison; Bendan Crill; Marion Dierickx; L. Duband; Cora Dvorkin; J. P. Filippini; S. Fliescher; J. A. Grayson; Grantland Hall; M. Halpern; S. Harrison; S. R. Hildebrandt; G. C. Hilton; H. Hui; K. D. Irwin
, consistent with cross-talk in our multiplexed readout system. End-to-end optical efficiencies in our cameras are routinely 35% or higher, with per detector sensitivities of NET ~ 300