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Featured researches published by Elmer H. Sharp.


The Astrophysical Journal | 2011

STAR AND DUST FORMATION ACTIVITIES IN AzTEC-3, A STARBURST GALAXY AT z = 5.3

Eli Dwek; Johannes G. Staguhn; Richard G. Arendt; P. Capak; A. Kovács; Dominic J. Benford; Dale J. Fixsen; A. Karim; S. Leclercq; Stephen F. Maher; S. H. Moseley; E. Schinnerer; Elmer H. Sharp

Analyses of high-redshift ultraluminous infrared (IR) galaxies traditionally use the observed optical to submillimeter spectral energy distribution (SED) and estimates of the dynamical mass as observational constraints to derive the star formation rate (SFR), the stellar mass, and age of these objects. An important observational constraint neglected in the analysis is the mass of dust giving rise to the IR emission. In this paper we add this constraint to the analysis of AzTEC-3. Adopting an upper limit to the mass of stars and a bolometric luminosity for this object, we construct different stellar and chemical evolutionary scenarios, constrained to produce the inferred dust mass and observed luminosity before the associated stellar mass exceeds the observational limit. We use the PEGASE population synthesis code and a chemical evolution model to follow the evolution of the galaxys SED and its stellar and dust masses as a function of galactic age for seven different stellar initial mass functions (IMFs). We find that the model with a Top Heavy IMF provided the most plausible scenario consistent with the observational constraints. In this scenario the dust formed over a period of ~200 Myr, with an SFR of ~500 M_☉ yr^(–1). These values for the age and SFR in AzTEC-3 are significantly higher and lower, respectively, from those derived without the dust mass constraint. However, this scenario is not unique, and others cannot be completely ruled out because of the prevailing uncertainties in the age of the galaxy, its bolometric luminosity, and its stellar and dust masses. A robust result of our models is that all scenarios require most of the radiating dust mass to have been accreted in molecular clouds. Our new procedure highlights the importance of a multiwavelength approach, and of the use of dust evolution models in constraining the age and the star formation activity and history in galaxies.


Proceedings of SPIE | 2010

The Primordial Inflation Polarization Explorer (PIPER)

Justin Lazear; Peter A. R. Ade; Dominic J. Benford; C. L. Bennett; David T. Chuss; Jessie L. Dotson; Joseph R. Eimer; Dale J. Fixsen; M. Halpern; G. C. Hilton; J. Hinderks; G. Hinshaw; K. D. Irwin; B. R. Johnson; A. Kogut; Luke Lowe; Jeff McMahon; Timothy M. Miller; P. Mirel; S. Harvey Moseley; Samelys Rodriguez; Elmer H. Sharp; Johannes G. Staguhn; Eric R. Switzer; Carole Tucker; Amy Weston; Edward J. Wollack

The Primordial Inflation Polarization ExploreR (PIPER) is a balloon-borne telescope designed to measure the polarization of the Cosmic Microwave Background on large angular scales. PIPER will map 85% of the sky at 200, 270, 350, and 600 GHz over a series of 8 conventional balloon flights from the northern and southern hemispheres. The first science flight will use two 32 × 40 arrays of backshort-under-grid transition edge sensors, multiplexed in the time domain, and maintained at 100 mK by a Continuous Adiabatic Demagnetization Refrigerator. Front- end cryogenic Variable-delay Polarization Modulators provide systematic control by rotating linear to circular polarization at 3 Hz. Twin telescopes allow PIPER to measure Stokes I, Q, U , and V simultaneously. The telescope is maintained at 1.5 K in an LHe bucket dewar. Cold optics and the lack of a warm window permit sensitivity at the sky-background limit. The ultimate science target is a limit on the tensor-to-scalar ratio of r ∼ 0.007, from the reionization bump to l ∼ 300. PIPER’s first flight will be from the Northern hemisphere, and overlap with the CLASS survey at lower frequencies. We describe the current status of the PIPER instrument.


Proceedings of SPIE | 2006

GISMO: a 2-millimeter bolometer camera for the IRAM 30 m telescope

Johannes G. Staguhn; Dominic J. Benford; Christine A. Allen; S. Harvey Moseley; Elmer H. Sharp; Troy J. Ames; Walter Brunswig; David T. Chuss; Eli Dwek; Stephen F. Maher; Catherine T. Marx; Timothy M. Miller; Santiago Navarro; Edward J. Wollack

We are building a bolometer camera (the Goddard-Iram Superconducting 2-Millimeter Observer, GISMO) for operation in the 2 mm atmospheric window to be used at the IRAM 30 m telescope. The instrument uses a 8x16 planar array of multiplexed TES bolometers which incorporates our newly designed Backshort Under Grid (BUG) architecture. Due to the size and sensitivity of the detector array (the NEP of the detectors is 4×10-17 W/√Hz), this instrument will be unique in that it will be capable of providing significantly greater imaging sensitivity and mapping speed at this wavelength than has previously been possible. The major scientific driver for this instrument is to provide the IRAM 30 m telescope with the capability to rapidly observe galactic and extragalactic dust emission, in particular from high-z ULIRGs and quasars, even in the summer season. The 2 mm spectral range provides a unique window to observe the earliest active dusty galaxies in the universe and is well suited to better confine the star formation rate in these objects. The instrument will fill in the SEDs of high redshift galaxies at the Rayleigh-Jeans part of the dust emission spectrum, even at the highest redshifts. The observational efficiency of a 2 mm camera with respect to bolometer cameras operating at shorter wavelengths increases for objects at redshifts beyond z ~ 1 and is most efficient at the highest redshifts, at the time when the first stars were re-ionizing the universe. Our models predict that at this wavelength one out of four serendipitously detected galaxies will be at a redshift of z > 6.5.


Proceedings of SPIE | 2010

5,120 Superconducting Bolometers for the PIPER Balloon-Borne CMB Polarization Experiment

Dominic J. Benford; David T. Chuss; G. C. Hilton; K. D. Irwin; Nikhil S. Jethava; A. Kogut; Timothy M. Miller; P. Mirel; S. Harvey Moseley; Karwan Rostem; Elmer H. Sharp; Johannes G. Staguhn; Gregory M. Stiehl; George M. Voellmer; Edward J. Wollack

We are constructing the Primordial Inflation Polarization Explorer (PIPER) to measure the polarization of the cosmic microwave background (CMB) and search for the imprint of gravity waves produced during an inflationary epoch in the early universe. The signal is faint and lies behind confusing foregrounds, both astrophysical and cosmological, and so many detectors are required to complete the measurement in a limited time. We will use four of our matured 1,280 pixel, high-filling-factor backshort-under-grid bolometer arrays for efficient operation at the PIPER CMB wavelengths. All four arrays observe at a common wavelength set by passband filters in the optical path. PIPER will fly four times to observe at wavelengths of 1500, 1100, 850, and 500 μm in order to separate CMB from foreground emission. The arrays employ leg-isolated superconducting transition edge sensor bolometers operated at 128 mK; tuned resonant backshorts for efficient optical coupling; and a second-generation superconducting quantum interference device (SQUID) multiplexer readout. We describe the design, development, and performance of PIPER bolometer array technology to achieve background-limited sensitivity for a cryogenic balloon-borne telescope.


Applied Optics | 2006

Optical performance of frequency-selective bolometers

T. A. Perera; Tom Downes; S. S. Meyer; T. M. Crawford; E. S. Cheng; T. C. Chen; David A. Cottingham; Elmer H. Sharp; R. F. Silverberg; Fred M. Finkbeiner; Dale J. Fixsen; Daniel W. Logan; Grant W. Wilson

Frequency-selective bolometers (FSBs) are a new type of detector for millimeter and submillimeter wavelengths that are transparent to all but a narrow range of frequencies as set by characteristics of the absorber itself. Therefore stacks of FSBs tuned to different frequencies provide a low-loss compact method for utilizing a large fraction of the light collected by a telescope. Tests of prototype FSBs indicate that the absorption spectra are well predicted by models, that peak absolute absorption efficiencies of the order of 50% are attainable, and that their out-of-band transmission is high.


Proceedings of SPIE | 2012

Stray light suppression in the Goddard IRAM 2-Millimeter Observer (GISMO)

Elmer H. Sharp; Dominic J. Benford; Dale J. Fixsen; S. H. Moseley; Johannes G. Staguhn; Edward J. Wollack

The Goddard-IRAM Superconducting 2 Millimeter Observer (GISMO) is an 8x16 Transition Edge Sensor (TES) array of bolometers built as a pathfinder for TES detector development efforts at NASA Goddard Space Flight Center. GISMO has been used annually at the Institut de Radioastronomie Millimétrique (IRAM) 30 meter telescope since 2007 under engineering time and was opened in the spring of 2012 to the general astronomical community. The spring deployment provided an opportunity to modify elements of the room temperature optics before moving the instrument to its new permanent position in the telescope receiver cabin. This allowed for the possibility to extend the cryostat, introduce improved cold baffling and thus further optimize the stray light performance for final astronomical use of the instrument, which has been completed and validated. We will demonstrate and discuss several of the methods used to quantify and limit the influence of stray light in the GISMO camera.


Proceedings of SPIE | 2008

Instrument Performance of GISMO, a 2 Millimeter TES Bolometer Camera used at the IRAM 30 m Telescope

Johannes G. Staguhn; Dominic J. Benford; Christine A. Allen; Stephen F. Maher; Elmer H. Sharp; Troy J. Ames; Richard G. Arendt; David T. Chuss; Eli Dwek; Dale J. Fixsen; Timothy M. Miller; S. Harvey Moseley; Santiago Navarro; Albrecht Sievers; Edward J. Wollack

We have developed key technologies to enable highly versatile, kilopixel bolometer arrays for infrared through millimeter wavelengths. Our latest array architecture is based on our Backshort Under Grid (BUG) design, which is specifically targeted at producing kilopixel-size arrays for future ground-based, suborbital and space-based X-ray and far-infrared through millimeter cameras and spectroometers. In November of 2007, we demonstrated a monolithic 8x16 BUG bolometer array with 2 mm-pitch detectors for astronomical observations using our 2 mm wavelength camera GISMO (the Goddard IRAM Superconducting 2 Millimeter Observer) at the IRAM 30 m telescope in Spain. The 2 mm spectral range provides a unique terrestrial window enabling ground-based observations of the earliest active dusty galaxies in the universe and thereby allowing a better constraint on the star formation rate in these objects. We present preliminary results from our observing run with the first fielded BUG bolometer array and discuss the performance of the instrument.


Astrophysical Journal Supplement Series | 2005

THE TOPHAT EXPERIMENT: A BALLOON-BORNE INSTRUMENT FOR MAPPING MILLIMETER AND SUBMILLIMETER EMISSION

R. F. Silverberg; E. S. Cheng; James E. Aguirre; Jeff Bezaire; T. M. Crawford; S. S. Meyer; Alex Bier; Barbara Campano; T. C. Chen; David A. Cottingham; Elmer H. Sharp; P.R. Christensen; S. Cordone; Peter T. Timbie; R.E. Dame; Dale J. Fixsen; R.J.K. Kristensen; H. U. Nørgaard-Nielsen; Grant W. Wilson

The TopHat experiment was designed to measure the anisotropy in the cosmic microwave background radiation on angular scales from 03 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.


Proceedings of SPIE | 2014

Kilopixel backshort-under-grid arrays for the Primordial Inflation Polarization Explorer

Dominic J. Benford; Regis P. Brekosky; Meng-Ping Chang; Nick Costen; Aaron M. Datesman; G. C. Hilton; K. D. Irwin; A. Kogut; Justin Lazear; Edward Leong; Stephen F. Maher; Timothy M. Miller; S. H. Moseley; Elmer H. Sharp; Johannes G. Staguhn; Edward J. Wollack

We have demonstrated a kilopixel, filled, infrared bolometer array for the balloon-borne Primordial Inflation Polarization Explorer (PIPER). The array consists of three individual components assembled into a single working unit: 1) a transition-edge-sensor bolometer array with background-limited sensitivity, 2) a quarter–wavelength backshort grid, and 3) an integrated Superconducting Quantum Interference Device (SQUID) multiplexer (MUX) readout. The detector array is a filled, square–grid of suspended, one-micron thick silicon bolometers with superconducting sensors. The Backshort–Under–Grid (BUG) is a separately fabricated component serving as a backshort to each pixel in the array. The backshorts are positioned in the cavities created behind each detector by the back–etched well. The spacing of the backshort beneath the detector grid can be set from ~30-300_microns by independently adjusting process parameters during fabrication. Kilopixel arrays are directly indium–bump–bonded to a 32x40 SQUID multiplexer circuit. The array architecture is suitable for a wide range of wavelengths and applications. Detector design specific to the PIPER instrument, fabrication overview, and assembly technologies will be discussed.


Astronomical Telescopes and Instrumentation | 2003

Development of frequency selective bolometers for ground-based MM-wave astronomy

David A. Cottingham; Alex Bier; Barbara Campano; T. C. Chen; Edward S. Cheng; T. M. Crawford; Fred M. Finkbeiner; Dale J. Fixsen; Daniel W. Logan; S. S. Meyer; Elmer H. Sharp; R. F. Silverberg; Grant W. Wilson

The Frequency Selective Bolometer (FSB) is a bolometer with a patterned frequency selective absorber, coupled with a band-reflecting backshort. The resulting unit absorbs in-band radiation, and passes out-of-band radiation. Thus a series of FSBs tuned to different bands packed in series in a light pipe forms a compact multi-band photometer. The compact form factor makes it an attractive detector for a mm-wave array camera. We have built and characterized prototypes that demonstrate this technology. We are now developing a set of FSBs for SPEED (the SPEctral Energy Distribution camera), an FSB array camera which will observe 4 pixels in 4 mm-wave spectral bands, to be used on the Heinrich Hertz Telescope and the Large Millimeter Telescope. These FSBs are fabricated on a free-standing SiN film with TES thermometers. We will discuss the design and performance of these detectors.

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Dale J. Fixsen

Goddard Space Flight Center

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Dominic J. Benford

Goddard Space Flight Center

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Edward J. Wollack

Goddard Space Flight Center

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Stephen F. Maher

Goddard Space Flight Center

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Timothy M. Miller

Goddard Space Flight Center

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David T. Chuss

Goddard Space Flight Center

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S. H. Moseley

Goddard Space Flight Center

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G. C. Hilton

National Institute of Standards and Technology

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