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Featured researches published by F. Gannaway.


Astronomy and Astrophysics | 2003

Cosmological constraints from Archeops

A. Benoit; Peter A. R. Ade; A. Amblard; R. Ansari; Eric Aubourg; S. Bargot; James G. Bartlett; J.-Ph. Bernard; R. S. Bhatia; A. Blanchard; J. J. Bock; A. Boscaleri; F. R. Bouchet; A. Bourrachot; P. Camus; F. Couchot; P. de Bernardis; J. Delabrouille; F.-X. Desert; O. Dore; M. Douspis; L. Dumoulin; X. Dupac; Ph. Filliatre; P. Fosalba; K. Ganga; F. Gannaway; B. Gautier; M. Giard; Y. Giraud-Héraud

We analyze the cosmological constraints that Archeops places on adiabatic cold dark matter models with passive power-law initial fluctuations. Because its angular power spectrum has small bins in l and large l coverage down to COBE scales, Archeops provides a precise determination of the first acoustic peak in terms of position at multipole l_peak=220 +- 6, height and width. An analysis of Archeops data in combination with other CMB datasets constrains the baryon content of the Universe, Omega(b)h^2 = 0.022 (+0.003,-0.004), compatible with Big-Bang nucleosynthesis and with a similar accuracy. Using cosmological priors obtainedfrom recent non-CMB data leads to yet tighter constraints on the total density, e.g. Omega(tot)=1.00 (+0.03,-0.02) using the HST determination of the Hubble constant. An excellent absolute calibration consistency is found between Archeops and other CMB experiments, as well as with the previously quoted best fit model.The spectral index n is measured to be 1.04 (+0.10,-0.12) when the optical depth to reionization, tau, is allowed to vary as a free parameter, and 0.96 (+0.03,-0.04) when tau is fixed to zero, both in good agreement with inflation.


Astronomy and Astrophysics | 2003

The cosmic microwave background anisotropy power spectrum measured by archeops

A. Benoit; Peter A. R. Ade; A. Amblard; R. Ansari; Eric Aubourg; S. Bargot; James G. Bartlett; J.-Ph. Bernard; R. S. Bhatia; A. Blanchard; J. J. Bock; A. Boscaleri; F. R. Bouchet; A. Bourrachot; P. Camus; F. Couchot; P. de Bernardis; J. Delabrouille; F.-X. Desert; O. Dore; M. Douspis; L. Dumoulin; X. Dupac; Ph. Filliatre; P. Fosalba; K. Ganga; F. Gannaway; B. Gautier; M. Giard; Y. Giraud-Héraud

We present a determination by the Archeops experiment of the angular power spectrum of the cosmic microwave background anisotropy in 16 bins over the multipole range l=15-350. Archeops was conceived as a precursor of the Planck HFI instrument by using the same optical design and the same technology for the detectors and their cooling. Archeops is a balloon-borne instrument consisting of a 1.5 m aperture diameter telescope and an array of 21 photometers maintained at ~100 mK that are operating in 4 frequency bands centered at 143, 217, 353 and 545 GHz. The data were taken during the Arctic night of February 7, 2002 after the instrument was launched by CNES from Esrange base (Sweden). The entire data cover ~ 30% of the sky.This first analysis was obtained with a small subset of the dataset using the most sensitive photometer in each CMB band (143 and 217 GHz) and 12.6% of the sky at galactic latitudes above 30 degrees where the foreground contamination is measured to be negligible. The large sky coverage and medium resolution (better than 15 arcminutes) provide for the first time a high signal-to-noise ratio determination of the power spectrum over angular scales that include both the first acoustic peak and scales probed by COBE/DMR. With a binning of Delta(l)=7 to 25 the error bars are dominated by sample variance for l below 200. A companion paper details the cosmological implications.


Astronomy and Astrophysics | 2004

First detection of polarization of the submillimetre diffuse galactic dust emission by Archeops

A. Benoît; Peter A. R. Ade; A. Amblard; R. Ansari; Eric Aubourg; S. Bargot; J. G. Bartlett; J.-Ph. Bernard; R. S. Bhatia; A. Blanchard; J. J. Bock; A. Boscaleri; F. R. Bouchet; A. Bourrachot; P. Camus; F. Couchot; P. de Bernardis; J. Delabrouille; F.-X. Desert; O. Doré; M. Douspis; L. Dumoulin; X. Dupac; P. Filliatre; P. Fosalba; K. Ganga; F. Gannaway; B. Gautier; M. Giard; Y. Giraud-Heraud

We present the first determination of the Galactic polarized emission at 353 GHz by Archeops. The data were taken during the Arctic night of February 7, 2002 after the balloon--borne instrument was launched by CNES from the Swedish Esrange base near Kiruna. In addition to the 143 GHz and 217 GHz frequency bands dedicated to CMB studies, Archeops had one 545 GHz and six 353 GHz bolometers mounted in three polarization sensitive pairs that were used for Galactic foreground studies. We present maps of the I, Q, U Stokes parameters over 17% of the sky and with a 13 arcmin resolution at 353 GHz (850 microns). They show a significant Galactic large scale polarized emission coherent on the longitude ranges [100, 120] and [180, 200] deg. with a degree of polarization at the level of 4-5%, in agreement with expectations from starlight polarization measurements. Some regions in the Galactic plane (Gem OB1, Cassiopeia) show an even stronger degree of polarization in the range 10-20%. Those findings provide strong evidence for a powerful grain alignment mechanism throughout the interstellar medium and a coherent magnetic field coplanar to the Galactic plane. This magnetic field pervades even some dense clouds. Extrapolated to high Galactic latitude, these results indicate that interstellar dust polarized emission is the major foreground for PLANCK-HFI CMB polarization measurement.


Journal of Instrumentation | 2008

The evaporative cooling system for the ATLAS inner detector

D. Attree; P. Werneke; F. Corbaz; J. Mistry; A. Rovani; K. Einsweiler; J.P. Bizzel; C. Menot; T. J. Jones; Eric Anderssen; Gibson; P. Barclay; P. Bonneau; S W Lindsay; M. Parodi; R. L. Bates; R. B. Nickerson; H. Pernegger; M. Tyndel; S. Butterworth; V. Sopko; J. Bendotti; E. Perrin; M Doubrava; N. P. Hessey; A. Nichols; P.E. Nordahl; J. Tarrant; I Gousakov; D. Muskett

This paper describes the evaporative system used to cool the silicon detector structures of the inner detector sub-detectors of the ATLAS experiment at the CERN Large Hadron Collider. The motivation for an evaporative system, its design and construction are discussed. In detail the particular requirements of the ATLAS inner detector, technical choices and the qualification and manufacture of final components are addressed. Finally results of initial operational tests are reported. Although the entire system described, the paper focuses on the on-detector aspects. Details of the evaporative cooling plant will be discussed elsewhere.


Astroparticle Physics | 2002

Archeops: a high resolution, large sky coverage balloon experiment for mapping cosmic microwave background anisotropies

A. Benoît; Peter A. R. Ade; A. Amblard; R. Ansari; E. Aubourg; J. Bartlett; J. P. Bernard; R. S. Bhatia; A. Blanchard; J. J. Bock; A. Boscaleri; F. R. Bouchet; A. Bourrachot; P. Camus; F. Couchot; P. de Bernardis; J. Delabrouille; F.-X. Desert; O. Dore; M. Douspis; L. Dumoulin; X. Dupac; Ph. Filliatre; K. Ganga; F. Gannaway; B. Gautier; M. Giard; Y. Giraud-Heraud; R. Gispert; L. Guglielmi

Archeops is a balloon-borne instrument dedicated to measuring cosmic microwave background (CMB) temperature anisotropies at high angular resolution (∼8′) over a large fraction (∼25%) of the sky in the millimetre domain. Based on Planck high frequency instrument technology, cooled bolometers (0.1 K) scan the sky in total power mode with large circles at constant elevation. During the course of a 24-h Arctic-night balloon flight, Archeops will observe a complete annulus on the sky in four frequency bands centered at 143, 217, 353 and 545 GHz with an expected sensitivity to CMB fluctuations of ∼100 μK for each of the 90 thousand 20′ average pixels. We describe the instrument and its performance obtained during a test flight from Trapani (Sicily) to Spain in July 1999.


Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society | 2003

A submillimetre imaging polarimeter at the James Clerk Maxwell Telescope

J. S. Greaves; Wayne S. Holland; Tim Jenness; A. Chrysostomou; D. S. Berry; A. G. Murray; Motohide Tamura; E. I. Robson; Peter A. R. Ade; R. Nartallo; J. A. Stevens; Munetake Momose; J.-I. Morino; G. Moriarty-Schieven; F. Gannaway; C. V. Haynes

A polarimeter has been built for use with the Submillimetre Common-User Bolometer Array (SCUBA), on the James Clerk Maxwell Telescope (JCMT) in Hawaii. SCUBA is the first of a new generation of highly sensitive submillimetre cameras, and the UK/Japan Polarimeter adds a polarimetric imaging/photometry capability in the wavelength range 350 to 2000 μm. Early science results range from measuring the synchrotron polarization of the black hole candidate Sgr A* to mapping magnetic fields inferred from polarized dust emission in Galactic star-forming clouds. We describe the instrument design, performance, observing techniques and data reduction processes, along with an assessment of the current and future scientific capability.


Journal of Atmospheric and Oceanic Technology | 1999

SAFIRE-A: Spectroscopy of the Atmosphere Using Far-Infrared Emission/Airborne

Bruno Carli; Peter A. R. Ade; Ugo Cortesi; Paul H.G. Dickinson; Michele Epifani; F. Gannaway; Alessandro Gignoli; Corneli Keim; Clare Lee; C. Meny; Jean Leotin; F. Mencaraglia; A. G. Murray; Ira G. Nolt; Marco Ridolfi

A new instrument named SAFIRE-A (Spectroscopy of the Atmosphere using Far-Infrared Emission/Airborne), which can operate on high-altitude platforms, has been developed for the study of the atmospheric composition through limb-scanning emission measurements. The instrument is a polarizing Fourier transform spectrometer that operates in the far infrared with a resolution of 0.004 cm(−1). SAFIRE-A uses efficient photon noise limited detectors and a novel optical configuration, which provide a cold pupil and field stop as well as cold narrow bandpass filters to enhance its sensitivity. The instrument was successfully operated on an M-55 stratospheric research aircraft in the polar regions during the winter 1996–97 Airborne Polar Experiment. The instrument design, aircraft integration, and performances attained in the field campaign are described and discussed. The atmospheric emission spectrum is measured with an rms noise accuracy of 0.5 K (measured in brightness temperature) in each spectral element near 20 cm(−1) with a 30-s measurement time.


Astronomy and Astrophysics | 2007

Archeops in-flight performance, data processing, and map making

J. F. Macías-Pérez; Guilaine Lagache; Bruno Maffei; K. Ganga; A. Bourrachot; Peter A. R. Ade; A. Amblard; R. Ansari; E. Aubourg; J. Aumont; S. Bargot; J. G. Bartlett; A. Benoît; J.-Ph. Bernard; R. S. Bhatia; Alain Blanchard; J. J. Bock; A. Boscaleri; F. R. Bouchet; P. Camus; J.-F. Cardoso; F. Couchot; P. de Bernardis; J. Delabrouille; F.-X. Desert; O. Doré; M. Douspis; L. Dumoulin; X. Dupac; Ph. Filliatre

Aims:Archeops is a balloon-borne experiment inspired by the Planck satellite and its high frequency instrument (HFI). It is designed to measure the cosmic microwave background (CMB) temperature anisotropies at high angular resolution (~12 arcmin) over a large fraction of the sky (around 30%) at 143, 217, 353, and 545 GHz. The Archeops 353 GHz channel consists of three pairs of polarized sensitive bolometers designed to detect the polarized diffuse emission of Galactic dust. Methods: In this paper we present an update of the instrumental setup, as well as the flight performance for the last Archeops flight campaign (February 2002 from Kiruna, Sweden). We also describe the processing and analysis of the Archeops time-ordered data for that campaign, which led to measurement of the CMB anisotropy power spectrum in the multipole range l = 10-700 and to the first measurements of both the polarized emission of dust at large angular scales and its power spectra in the multipole range l = 3-70 Results: We present maps covering approximately 30% of the sky. These maps contain Galactic emission, including the Galactic plane, in the four Archeops channels at 143, 217, 353, and 545 GHz and CMB anisotropies at 143 and 217 GHz. These are one of the first sub-degree-resolution maps in the millimeter and submillimeter ranges of the large angular-scale diffuse Galactic dust emission and CMB temperature anisotropies, respectively.


Proceedings of SPIE | 2004

Thermal design of the SCUBA-2 instrument detector stage and enclosure

Adam L. Woodcraft; F. Gannaway; David C. Gostick; Dan Bintley

The SCUBA-2 instrument is a new wide field submillimeter imager currently being designed for the James Clerk Maxwell telescope on Mauna Kea in Hawaii. The instrument will observe simultaneously in the 450 and 850 micron bands and has a field of view of approximately 50 square arcminutes. To meet the performance requirements the detectors require a heat sink at a temperature of 50 mK or lower, and must be surrounded by an enclosure at a temperature of 1.1 K or below. Cooling is provided by the mixing chamber and still of a cryogen-free dilution refrigerator (DR), via thermal links of the order of a metre in length. A challenging set of requirements result from the need for a small temperature drop between the detectors and the refrigerator insert despite the large distance between them, the need to provide flexibility in the links to allow for movement during thermal contraction, and the need to allow for the detectors to be removed from the cryostat. Further, the arrays require a mounting structure which provides rigid mechanical support from the 1-K stage yet causes a very small heat input to millikelvin stage. This paper describes the design which has been evolved to meet these difficult (and often conflicting) requirements.


International Journal of Infrared and Millimeter Waves | 2002

High precision characterisation of semiconductor bolometers

Adam L. Woodcraft; Rashmikant Sudiwala; Matthew Joseph Griffin; E. Wakui; Bruno Maffei; Carole Tucker; C. V. Haynes; F. Gannaway; Peter A. R. Ade; J. J. Bock; A. D. Turner; S. Sethuraman; Jeffrey W. Beeman

We describe techniques for testing and characterising semiconductor bolometers, using the bolometer model presented in Sudiwala et. al. [1]. The procedures are illustrated with results from a prototype bolometer for the high frequency instrument (HFI) in the Planck Surveyor cosmic microwave background mission. This is a bolometer using spider-web geometry and a neutron transmutation doped (NTD) germanium thermistor, designed for operation at 100 mK. Details are given of the laboratory facility used to take data at temperatures from 70 mK to 350 mK. This employs an adiabatic demagnetisation refrigerator to cool the detector and optics. The spatial and spectral properties of the optical system are controlled using feedhorns and edge filters. To characterise the bolometer, blanked and optically loaded load curves were measured over a range of temperatures, and the response to modulated radiation was measured as a function of modulation frequency, temperature and bias current. Results for the prototype bolometer show that its behaviour is well represented by an ideal thermal detector down to a temperature of approximately 100 mK. Below this, non-thermal effects such as electron-phonon decoupling or electric field dependent resistance appear to lead to departure from ideal behaviour. The performance was in good agreement with the design goals for the bolometer.

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J. J. Bock

California Institute of Technology

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P. de Bernardis

Sapienza University of Rome

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A. Boscaleri

California Institute of Technology

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F.-X. Desert

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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F. Couchot

University of Paris-Sud

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