Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where K. Hattori is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by K. Hattori.


Proceedings of SPIE | 2014

SPT-3G: a next-generation cosmic microwave background polarization experiment on the South Pole telescope

B. A. Benson; Peter A. R. Ade; Z. Ahmed; S. W. Allen; K. Arnold; J. E. Austermann; A. N. Bender; L. E. Bleem; J. E. Carlstrom; C. L. Chang; H. M. Cho; Jean-François Cliche; T. M. Crawford; A. Cukierman; T. de Haan; M. Dobbs; D. Dutcher; W. Everett; A. Gilbert; N. W. Halverson; D. Hanson; N. L. Harrington; K. Hattori; J. W. Henning; G. C. Hilton; Gilbert P. Holder; W. L. Holzapfel; K. D. Irwin; R. Keisler; L. Knox

We describe the design of a new polarization sensitive receiver, spt-3g, for the 10-meter South Pole Telescope (spt). The spt-3g receiver will deliver a factor of ~20 improvement in mapping speed over the current receiver, spt-pol. The sensitivity of the spt-3g receiver will enable the advance from statistical detection of B-mode polarization anisotropy power to high signal-to-noise measurements of the individual modes, i.e., maps. This will lead to precise (~0.06 eV) constraints on the sum of neutrino masses with the potential to directly address the neutrino mass hierarchy. It will allow a separation of the lensing and inflationary B-mode power spectra, improving constraints on the amplitude and shape of the primordial signal, either through spt-3g data alone or in combination with bicep2/keck, which is observing the same area of sky. The measurement of small-scale temperature anisotropy will provide new constraints on the epoch of reionization. Additional science from the spt-3g survey will be significantly enhanced by the synergy with the ongoing optical Dark Energy Survey (des), including: a 1% constraint on the bias of optical tracers of large-scale structure, a measurement of the differential Doppler signal from pairs of galaxy clusters that will test General Relativity on ~200Mpc scales, and improved cosmological constraints from the abundance of clusters of galaxies


Physical Review Letters | 2014

Measurement of the Cosmic Microwave Background Polarization Lensing Power Spectrum with the POLARBEAR experiment

Peter A. R. Ade; Y. Akiba; A. E. Anthony; K. Arnold; M. Atlas; D. Barron; D. Boettger; J. Borrill; Sydney Chapman; Y. Chinone; M. Dobbs; T. Elleflot; J. Errard; G. Fabbian; Chang Feng; D. Flanigan; A. Gilbert; William F. Grainger; N. W. Halverson; M. Hasegawa; K. Hattori; M. Hazumi; W. L. Holzapfel; Y. Hori; J. Howard; P. Hyland; Y. Inoue; G. Jaehnig; A. H. Jaffe; Brian Keating

Gravitational lensing due to the large-scale distribution of matter in the cosmos distorts the primordial cosmic microwave background (CMB) and thereby induces new, small-scale B-mode polarization. This signal carries detailed information about the distribution of all the gravitating matter between the observer and CMB last scattering surface. We report the first direct evidence for polarization lensing based on purely CMB information, from using the four-point correlations of even- and odd-parity E- and B-mode polarization mapped over ∼30 square degrees of the sky measured by the POLARBEAR experiment. These data were analyzed using a blind analysis framework and checked for spurious systematic contamination using null tests and simulations. Evidence for the signal of polarization lensing and lensing B modes is found at 4.2σ (stat+sys) significance. The amplitude of matter fluctuations is measured with a precision of 27%, and is found to be consistent with the Lambda cold dark matter cosmological model. This measurement demonstrates a new technique, capable of mapping all gravitating matter in the Universe, sensitive to the sum of neutrino masses, and essential for cleaning the lensing B-mode signal in searches for primordial gravitational waves.


Proceedings of SPIE | 2012

LiteBIRD: a small satellite for the study of B-mode polarization and inflation from cosmic background radiation detection

M. Hazumi; J. Borrill; Y. Chinone; M. Dobbs; H. Fuke; A. Ghribi; M. Hasegawa; K. Hattori; Makoto Hattori; W. L. Holzapfel; Y. Inoue; K. Ishidoshiro; H. Ishino; Kenichi Karatsu; Nobuhiko Katayama; Isao Kawano; A. Kibayashi; Y. Kibe; N. Kimura; K. Koga; Eiichiro Komatsu; A. T. Lee; Hideo Matsuhara; T. Matsumura; S. Mima; K. Mitsuda; H. Morii; S. Murayama; Makoto Nagai; R. Nagata

LiteBIRD [Lite (Light) satellite for the studies of B-mode polarization and Inflation from cosmic background Radiation Detection] is a small satellite to map the polarization of the cosmic microwave background (CMB) radiation over the full sky at large angular scales with unprecedented precision. Cosmological inflation, which is the leading hypothesis to resolve the problems in the Big Bang theory, predicts that primordial gravitational waves were created during the inflationary era. Measurements of polarization of the CMB radiation are known as the best probe to detect the primordial gravitational waves. The LiteBIRD working group is authorized by the Japanese Steering Committee for Space Science (SCSS) and is supported by JAXA. It has more than 50 members from Japan, USA and Canada. The scientific objective of LiteBIRD is to test all the representative inflation models that satisfy single-field slow-roll conditions and lie in the large-field regime. To this end, the requirement on the precision of the tensor-to-scalar ratio, r, at LiteBIRD is equal to or less than 0.001. Our baseline design adopts an array of multi-chroic superconducting polarimeters that are read out with high multiplexing factors in the frequency domain for a compact focal plane. The required sensitivity of 1.8μKarcmin is achieved with 2000 TES bolometers at 100mK. The cryogenic system is based on the Stirling/JT technology developed for SPICA, and the continuous ADR system shares the design with future X-ray satellites.


Proceedings of SPIE | 2012

The bolometric focal plane array of the POLARBEAR CMB experiment

K. Arnold; Peter A. R. Ade; A. E. Anthony; D. Barron; D. Boettger; J. Borrill; S. C. Chapman; Y. Chinone; M. Dobbs; J. Errard; G. Fabbian; D. Flanigan; G. A. Fuller; A. Ghribi; William F. Grainger; N. W. Halverson; M. Hasegawa; K. Hattori; M. Hazumi; W. L. Holzapfel; J. Howard; P. Hyland; A. Jaffe; Brian Keating; Z. Kermish; T. S. Kisner; M. Le Jeune; A. T. Lee; E. Linder; M. Lungu

The POLARBEAR Cosmic Microwave Background (CMB) polarization experiment is currently observing from the Atacama Desert in Northern Chile. It will characterize the expected B-mode polarization due to gravitational lensing of the CMB, and search for the possible B-mode signature of inflationary gravitational waves. Its 250 mK focal plane detector array consists of 1,274 polarization-sensitive antenna-coupled bolometers, each with an associated lithographed band-defining filter. Each detector’s planar antenna structure is coupled to the telescope’s optical system through a contacting dielectric lenslet, an architecture unique in current CMB experiments. We present the initial characterization of this focal plane.


Superconductor Science and Technology | 2015

Fabrication of large dual-polarized multichroic TES bolometer arrays for CMB measurements with the SPT-3G camera

C. M. Posada; Peter A. R. Ade; Z. Ahmed; K. Arnold; J. E. Austermann; A. N. Bender; L. E. Bleem; B. A. Benson; K. L. Byrum; J. E. Carlstrom; C. L. Chang; H. M. Cho; S. T. Ciocys; Jean-François Cliche; T. M. Crawford; A. Cukierman; David A. Czaplewski; Junjia Ding; Ralu Divan; T. de Haan; M. Dobbs; D. Dutcher; W. Everett; A. Gilbert; N. W. Halverson; N. L. Harrington; K. Hattori; J. W. Henning; G. C. Hilton; W. L. Holzapfel

This work presents the procedures used at Argonne National Laboratory to fabricate large arrays of multichroic transition-edge sensor (TES) bolometers for cosmic microwave background (CMB) measurements. These detectors will be assembled into the focal plane for the SPT-3G camera, the third generation CMB camera to be installed in the South Pole Telescope. The complete SPT-3G camera will have approximately 2690 pixels, for a total of 16 140 TES bolometric detectors. Each pixel is comprised of a broad-band sinuous antenna coupled to a Nb microstrip line. In-line filters are used to define the different bands before the millimeter-wavelength signal is fed to the respective Ti/Au TES bolometers. There are six TES bolometer detectors per pixel, which allow for measurements of three band-passes (95, 150 and 220 GHz) and two polarizations. The steps involved in the monolithic fabrication of these detector arrays are presented here in detail. Patterns are defined using a combination of stepper and contact lithography. The misalignment between layers is kept below 200 nm. The overall fabrication involves a total of 16 processes, including reactive and magnetron sputtering, reactive ion etching, inductively coupled plasma etching and chemical etching.


Proceedings of SPIE | 2014

The Simons Array: expanding POLARBEAR to three multi-chroic telescopes

K. Arnold; N. Stebor; Peter A. R. Ade; Y. Akiba; A. E. Anthony; M. Atlas; D. Barron; A. N. Bender; D. Boettger; J. Borrill; S. C. Chapman; Y. Chinone; A. Cukierman; M. Dobbs; T. Elleflot; J. Errard; G. Fabbian; C. Feng; A. Gilbert; Neil Goeckner-Wald; N. W. Halverson; M. Hasegawa; K. Hattori; M. Hazumi; W. L. Holzapfel; Y. Hori; Y. Inoue; G. Jaehnig; A. H. Jaffe; Nobuhiko Katayama

The Simons Array is an expansion of the POLARBEAR cosmic microwave background (CMB) polarization experiment currently observing from the Atacama Desert in Northern Chile. This expansion will create an array of three 3.5m telescopes each coupled to a multichroic bolometric receiver. The Simons Array will have the sensitivity to produce a ≥ 5σ detection of inationary gravitational waves with a tensor-to-scalar ratio r ≥ 0:01, detect the known minimum 58 meV sum of the neutrino masses with 3σ confidence when combined with a next-generation baryon acoustic oscillation measurement, and make a lensing map of large-scale structure over the 80% of the sky available from its Chilean site. These goals require high sensitivity and the ability to extract the CMB signal from contaminating astrophysical foregrounds; these requirements are met by coupling the three high-throughput telescopes to novel multichroic lenslet-coupled pixels each measuring CMB photons in both linear polarization states over multiple spectral bands. We present the status of this instrument already under construction, and an analysis of its capabilities.


Proceedings of SPIE | 2016

POLARBEAR-2: An instrument for CMB polarization measurements

Y. Inoue; Peter A. R. Ade; Y. Akiba; C. Aleman; K. Arnold; C. Baccigalupi; D. Barron; A. N. Bender; D. Boettger; J. Borrill; S. C. Chapman; Y. Chinone; A. Cukierman; T. de Haan; M. Dobbs; A. Ducout; Rolando Dünner; T. Elleflot; J. Errard; G. Fabbian; Stephen M. Feeney; Chang Feng; G. A. Fuller; A. Gilbert; Neil Goeckner-Wald; John Groh; G. Hall; N. W. Halverson; T. Hamada; M. Hasegawa

POLARBEAR-2 (PB-2) is a cosmic microwave background (CMB) polarization experiment that will be located in the Atacama highland in Chile at an altitude of 5200 m. Its science goals are to measure the CMB polarization signals originating from both primordial gravitational waves and weak lensing. PB-2 is designed to measure the tensor to scalar ratio, r, with precision σ(r) > 0:01, and the sum of neutrino masses, Σmz, with σ(Σmv) < 90 meV. To achieve these goals, PB-2 will employ 7588 transition-edge sensor bolometers at 95 GHz and 150 GHz, which will be operated at the base temperature of 250 mK. Science observations will begin in 2017.


Journal of Cosmology and Astroparticle Physics | 2017

Performance of a continuously rotating half-wave plate on the POLARBEAR telescope

S. Takakura; Mario Aguilar; Yoshiki Akiba; K. Arnold; C. Baccigalupi; D. Barron; Shawn Beckman; D. Boettger; J. Borrill; S. C. Chapman; Y. Chinone; A. Cukierman; A. Ducout; T. Elleflot; J. Errard; Giulio Fabbian; Takuro Fujino; Nicholas Galitzki; Neil Goeckner-Wald; N. W. Halverson; M. Hasegawa; K. Hattori; M. Hazumi; Charles Hill; Logan Howe; Y. Inoue; A. H. Jaffe; O. Jeong; D. Kaneko; Nobuhiko Katayama

National Science Foundation AST-0618398 AST-1212230 Comision Nacional de Investigacion Cientifica y Tecnologica de Chile (CONICYT) Office of Science of the U.S. Department of Energy DE-AC02-05CH11231 MEXT KAKENHI Grant JP15H05891 21111002 JSPS KAKENHI Grant JP26220709 JP24111715 JSPS Core-to-Core Program RADIOFOREGROUNDS grant of the European Unions Horizon research and innovation programme (COMPET) 687312 INDARK INFN Initiative CONICYTs UC Berkeley-Chile Seed Grant (CLAS fund) 77047 Fondecyt 1130777 DFI postgraduate scholarship program DFI Postgraduate Competitive Fund for Support in the Attendance to Scientific Events NSF AST-1501422 CNES postdoctoral program Science and Technology Facilities Council ST/L000652/1 European Research Council under the European Unions Seventh Framework Programme (FP) / ERC Grant 616170 Australian Research Councils Future Fellowship FT150100074 hp150132


Proceedings of SPIE | 2016

The Simons Array CMB polarization experiment

N. Stebor; Peter A. R. Ade; Y. Akiba; C. Aleman; K. Arnold; C. Baccigalupi; D. Barron; S. Beckman; A. N. Bender; D. Boettger; J. Borrill; S. C. Chapman; Y. Chinone; A. Cukierman; T. de Haan; M. Dobbs; A. Ducout; Rolando Dünner; T. Elleflot; J. Errard; G. Fabbian; Stephen M. Feeney; Chang Feng; T. Fujino; G. A. Fuller; A. Gilbert; Neil Goeckner-Wald; John Groh; G. Hall; N. W. Halverson

The Simons Array is a next generation cosmic microwave background (CMB) polarization experiment whose science target is a precision measurement of the B-mode polarization pattern produced both by inflation and by gravitational lensing. As a continuation and extension of the successful POLARBEAR experimental program, the Simons Array will consist of three cryogenic receivers each featuring multichroic bolometer arrays mounted onto separate 3.5m telescopes. The first of these, also called POLARBEAR-2A, will be the first to deploy in late 2016 and has a large diameter focal plane consisting of dual-polarization dichroic pixels sensitive at 95 GHz and 150 GHz. The POLARBEAR-2A focal plane will utilize 7,588 antenna-coupled superconducting transition edge sensor (TES) bolometers read out with SQUID amplifiers using frequency domain multiplexing techniques. The next two receivers that will make up the Simons Array will be nearly identical in overall design but will feature extended frequency capability. The combination of high sensitivity, multichroic frequency coverage and large sky area available from our mid-latitude Chilean observatory will allow Simons Array to produce high quality polarization sky maps over a wide range of angular scales and to separate out the CMB B-modes from other astrophysical sources with high fidelity. After accounting for galactic foreground separation, the Simons Array will detect the primordial gravitational wave B-mode signal to r > 0.01 with a significance of > 5σ and will constrain the sum of neutrino masses to 40 meV (1σ) when cross-correlated with galaxy surveys. We present the current status of this funded experiment, its future, and discuss its projected science return.


Proceedings of SPIE | 2016

Integrated performance of a frequency domain multiplexing readout in the SPT-3G receiver

A. N. Bender; Peter A. R. Ade; A. J. Anderson; J. S. Avva; Z. Ahmed; K. Arnold; J. E. Austermann; R. Basu Thakur; B. A. Benson; L. E. Bleem; K. L. Byrum; J. E. Carlstrom; F. W. Carter; C. L. Chang; H. M. Cho; Jean-François Cliche; T. M. Crawford; A. Cukierman; David A. Czaplewski; Junjia Ding; Ralu Divan; T. de Haan; M. Dobbs; D. Dutcher; Wendeline Everett; A. Gilbert; John Groh; R. Guyser; N. W. Halverson; A. H. Harke-Hosemann

The third generation receiver for the South Pole Telescope, SPT-3G, will make extremely deep, arcminuteresolution maps of the temperature and polarization of the cosmic microwave background. The SPT-3G maps will enable studies of the B-mode polarization signature, constraining primordial gravitational waves as well as the effect of massive neutrinos on structure formation in the late universe. The SPT-3G receiver will achieve exceptional sensitivity through a focal plane of ~16,000 transition-edge sensor bolometers, an order of magnitude more than the current SPTpol receiver. SPT-3G uses a frequency domain multiplexing (fMux) scheme to read out the focal plane, combining the signals from 64 bolometers onto a single pair of wires. The fMux readout facilitates the large number of detectors in the SPT-3G focal plane by limiting the thermal load due to readout wiring on the 250 millikelvin cryogenic stage. A second advantage of the fMux system is that the operation of each bolometer can be optimized. In addition to these benefits, the fMux readout introduces new challenges into the design and operation of the receiver. The bolometers are operated at a range of frequencies up to 5 MHz, requiring control of stray reactances over a large bandwidth. Additionally, crosstalk between multiplexed detectors will inject large false signals into the data if not adequately mitigated. SPT-3G is scheduled to deploy to the South Pole Telescope in late 2016. Here, we present the pre-deployment performance of the fMux readout system with the SPT-3G focal plane.

Collaboration


Dive into the K. Hattori's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

K. Arnold

University of Wisconsin-Madison

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

N. W. Halverson

University of Colorado Boulder

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

D. Barron

University of California

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

J. Borrill

Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Y. Akiba

Graduate University for Advanced Studies

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Y. Chinone

University of California

View shared research outputs
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge