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Dive into the research topics where M. C. Runyan is active.

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Featured researches published by M. C. Runyan.


Proceedings of SPIE | 2010

SPIDER: A balloon-borne CMB polarimeter for large angular scales

J. P. Filippini; Peter A. R. Ade; M. Amiri; S. J. Benton; R. Bihary; J. J. Bock; J. R. Bond; J. A. Bonetti; Sean Bryan; B. Burger; H. C. Chiang; Carlo R. Contaldi; Brendan Crill; Olivier Doré; M. Farhang; L. M. Fissel; N. N. Gandilo; S. R. Golwala; J. E. Gudmundsson; M. Halpern; Matthew Hasselfield; G. C. Hilton; Warren Holmes; Viktor V. Hristov; K. D. Irwin; W. C. Jones; C. L. Kuo; C. J. MacTavish; P. Mason; T. E. Montroy

We describe SPIDER, a balloon-borne instrument to map the polarization of the millimeter-wave sky with degree angular resolution. Spider consists of six monochromatic refracting telescopes, each illuminating a focal plane of large-format antenna-coupled bolometer arrays. A total of 2,624 superconducting transition-edge sensors are distributed among three observing bands centered at 90, 150, and 280 GHz. A cold half-wave plate at the aperture of each telescope modulates the polarization of incoming light to control systematics. SPIDERs first flight will be a 20-30-day Antarctic balloon campaign in December 2011. This flight will map ~8% of the sky to achieve unprecedented sensitivity to the polarization signature of the gravitational wave background predicted by inflationary cosmology. The SPIDER mission will also serve as a proving ground for these detector technologies in preparation for a future satellite mission.


The Astrophysical Journal | 2003

Peculiar Velocity Limits from Measurements of the Spectrum of the Sunyaev-Zeldovich Effect in Six Clusters of Galaxies

B. A. Benson; S. Church; Peter A. R. Ade; J. J. Bock; K. Ganga; J. Hinderks; Philip Daniel Mauskopf; B. Philhour; M. C. Runyan; K. L. Thompson

We have made measurements of the Sunyaev-Zeldovich (SZ) effect in six galaxy clusters at z > 0.2 using the Sunyaev-Zeldovich Infrared Experiment (SuZIE II) in three frequency bands between 150 and 350 GHz. Simultaneous multifrequency measurements have been used to distinguish between thermal and kinematic components of the SZ effect and to significantly reduce the effects of variations in atmospheric emission that can otherwise dominate the noise. We have set limits to the peculiar velocities of each cluster with respect to the Hubble flow and have used the cluster sample to set a 95% confidence limit of less than 1420 km s-1 to the bulk flow of the intermediate-redshift universe in the direction of the cosmic microwave background dipole. This is the first time that SZ measurements have been used to constrain bulk flows. We show that systematic uncertainties in peculiar velocity determinations from the SZ effect are likely to be dominated by submillimeter point sources, and we discuss the level of this contamination.


Proceedings of SPIE | 2010

The Keck Array: a pulse tube cooled CMB polarimeter

C. D. Sheehy; Peter A. R. Ade; Randol Aikin; M. Amiri; S. J. Benton; C. A. Bischoff; J. J. Bock; J. A. Bonetti; J. A. Brevik; B. Burger; C. D. Dowell; L. Duband; J. P. Filippini; S. R. Golwala; M. Halpern; Matthew Hasselfield; G. C. Hilton; V. V. Hristov; K. D. Irwin; J. P. Kaufman; Brian Keating; J. M. Kovac; C. L. Kuo; A. E. Lange; E. M. Leitch; M. Lueker; C. B. Netterfield; H. T. Nguyen; R. W. Ogburn Iv; A. Orlando

The Keck Array is a cosmic microwave background (CMB) polarimeter that will begin observing from the South Pole in late 2010. The initial deployment will consist of three telescopes similar to BICEP2 housed in ultracompact, pulse tube cooled cryostats. Two more receivers will be added the following year. In these proceedings we report on the design and performance of the Keck cryostat. We also report some initial results on the performance of antenna-coupled TES detectors operating in the presence of a pulse tube. We find that the performance of the detectors is not seriously impacted by the replacement of BICEP2s liquid helium cryostat with a pulse tube cooled cryostat.


The Astrophysical Journal | 2008

Spider optimization: Probing the systematics of a large-scale B-mode experiment

C. J. MacTavish; Peter A. R. Ade; E. S. Battistelli; S. Benton; R. Bihary; J. J. Bock; J. R. Bond; J. Brevik; Sean Bryan; Carlo R. Contaldi; Brendan Crill; Olivier Doré; L. M. Fissel; S. R. Golwala; M. Halpern; G. C. Hilton; Warren Holmes; Viktor V. Hristov; K. D. Irwin; W. C. Jones; C. L. Kuo; A. E. Lange; C. Lawrie; T. G. Martin; P. Mason; T. E. Montroy; C. B. Netterfield; Derek D. Riley; J. E. Ruhl; M. C. Runyan

Spider is a long-duration, balloon-borne polarimeter designed to measure large-scale cosmic microwave background (CMB) polarization with very high sensitivity and control of systematics. The instrument will map over half the sky with degree angular resolution in the I, Q, and U Stokes parameters in four frequency bands from 96 to 275 GHz. Spiders ultimate goal is to detect the primordial gravity-wave signal imprinted on the CMB B-mode polarization. One of the challenges in achieving this goal is the minimization of the contamination of B-modes by systematic effects. This paper explores a number of instrument systematics and observing strategies in order to optimize B-mode sensitivity. This is done by injecting realistic-amplitude, time-varying systematics into a set of simulated time streams. Tests of the impact of detector noise characteristics, pointing jitter, payload pendulations, polarization angle offsets, beam systematics, and receiver gain drifts are shown. Spiders default observing strategy is to spin continuously in azimuth, with polarization modulation achieved by either a rapidly spinning half-wave plate or a rapidly spinning gondola and a slowly stepped half-wave plate. Although the latter is more susceptible to systematics, the results shown here indicate that either mode of operation can be used by Spider.


Cryogenics | 2008

Thermal Conductivity of Thermally-Isolating Polymeric and Composite Structural Support Materials Between 0.3 and 4 K

M. C. Runyan; W. C. Jones

We present measurements of the low-temperature thermal conductivity of a number of polymeric and composite materials from 0.3 to 4 K. The materials measured are Vespel SP-1, Vespel SP-22, unfilled PEEK, 30% carbon fiber-filled PEEK, 30% glass-filled PEEK, carbon fiber Graphlite composite rod, Torlon 4301, G-10/FR-4 fiberglass, pultruded fiberglass composite, Macor ceramic, and graphite rod. These materials have moderate to high elastic moduli making them useful for thermally-isolating structural supports.


The Astrophysical Journal | 2000

A Determination of the Hubble Constant Using Measurements of X-Ray Emission and the Sunyaev-Zeldovich Effect at Millimeter Wavelengths in the Cluster Abell 1835

Philip Daniel Mauskopf; Peter A. R. Ade; S. W. Allen; S. Church; A. C. Edge; K. Ganga; W. L. Holzapfel; A. E. Lange; B. Rownd; B. J. Philhour; M. C. Runyan

We present a determination of the Hubble constant and central electron density in the cluster Abell 1835 (z = 0.2523) from measurements of X-ray emission and millimeter-wave observations of the Sunyaev-Zeldovich (S-Z) effect with the Sunyaev-Zeldovich Infrared Experiment (SuZIE) multifrequency array receiver. Abell 1835 is a well studied cluster in the X-ray with a large central cooling flow. Using a combination of data from ROSAT PSPC and HRI images and millimeter wave measurements we fit a King model to the emission from the ionized gas around Abell 1835 with θ0 = 0farcm22 ± 0farcm02 and β = 0.58 ± 0.02. Assuming the cluster gas to be isothermal with a temperature of 9.8img1.gif keV, we find a y-parameter of 4.9 ± 0.6 × 10-4 and a peculiar velocity of 500 ± 1000 km s-1 from measurements at three frequencies, 145, 221, and 279 GHz. Combining the S-Z measurements with X-ray data, we determine a value for the Hubble constant of H0 = 59img2.gif km s-1 Mpc-1 and a central electron density for Abell 1835 of ne0 = 5.64img3.gif × 10-2 cm-3 assuming a standard cosmology with Ωm = 1 and ΩΛ = 0. The error in the determination of the Hubble constant is dominated by the uncertainty in the temperature of the X-ray emitting cluster gas.


Proceedings of SPIE | 2010

Optical performance of the BICEP2 Telescope at the South Pole.

Randol Aikin; Peter A. R. Ade; S. J. Benton; J. J. Bock; J. A. Bonetti; J. A. Brevik; C. D. Dowell; L. Duband; J. P. Filippini; S. R. Golwala; M. Halpern; V. V. Hristov; K. D. Irwin; J. P. Kaufman; Brian Keating; J. M. Kovac; C. L. Kuo; A. E. Lange; C. B. Netterfield; H. T. Nguyen; R. W. Ogburn Iv; A. Orlando; C. Pryke; S. Richter; J. E. Ruhl; M. C. Runyan; C. D. Sheehy; S. Stokes; R. Sudiwala; G. Teply

Bicep2 deployed to the South Pole during the 2009-2010 austral summer, and is now mapping the polarization of the cosmic microwave background (CMB), searching for evidence of inflationary cosmology. Bicep2 belongs to a new class of telescopes including Keck (ground-based) and Spider (balloon-borne) that follow on Biceps strategy of employing small, cold, on-axis refracting optics. This common design provides key advantages ideal for targeting the polarization signature from inflation, including: (i) A large field of view, allowing substantial light collecting power despite the small aperture, while still resolving the degree-scale polarization of the CMB; (ii) liquid helium-cooled optics and cold stop, allowing for low, stable instrument loading; (iii) the ability to rotate the entire telescope about the boresight; (iv) a baffled primary aperture, reducing sidelobe pickup; and (v) the ability to characterize the far field optical performance of the telescope using ground-based sources. We describe the last of these advantages in detail, including our efforts to measure the main beam shape, beammatch between orthogonally-polarized pairs, polarization efficiency and response angle, sidelobe pickup, and ghost imaging. We do so with ground-based polarized microwave sources mounted in the far field as well as with astronomical calibrators. Ultimately, Bicep2s sensitivity to CMB polarization from inflation will rely on precise calibration of these beam features.


Proceedings of SPIE | 2010

Antenna-coupled TES Bolometer Arrays for BICEP2/Keck and SPIDER

Abigail Claire Orlando; R. W. Aikin; M. Amiri; J. J. Bock; J. A. Bonetti; J. A. Brevik; B. Burger; G. Chattopadthyay; Peter K. Day; J. P. Filippini; S. R. Golwala; M. Halpern; Matthew Hasselfield; G. C. Hilton; K. D. Irwin; M. Kenyon; J. M. Kovac; C. L. Kuo; A. E. Lange; H. G. LeDuc; Nuria Llombart; H. T. Nguyen; R. W. Ogburn; Carl D. Reintsema; M. C. Runyan; Zachary K. Staniszewski; R. Sudiwala; G. P. Teply; A. Trangsrud; A. D. Turner

BICEP2/Keck and SPIDER are cosmic microwave background (CMB) polarimeters targeting the B-mode polarization induced by primordial gravitational waves from inflation. They will be using planar arrays of polarization sensitive antenna-coupled TES bolometers, operating at frequencies between 90 GHz and 220 GHz. At 150 GHz each array consists of 64 polarimeters and four of these arrays are assembled together to make a focal plane, for a total of 256 dual-polarization elements (512 TES sensors). The detector arrays are integrated with a time-domain SQUID multiplexer developed at NIST and read out using the multi-channel electronics (MCE) developed at the University of British Columbia. Following our progress in improving detector parameters uniformity across the arrays and fabrication yield, our main effort has focused on improving detector arrays optical and noise performances, in order to produce science grade focal planes achieving target sensitivities. We report on changes in detector design implemented to optimize such performances and following focal plane arrays characterization. BICEP2 has deployed a first 150 GHz science grade focal plane to the South Pole in December 2009.


Proceedings of SPIE | 2010

Design and performance of the SPIDER instrument

M. C. Runyan; Peter A. R. Ade; M. Amiri; S. J. Benton; R. Bihary; J. J. Bock; J. R. Bond; J. A. Bonetti; Sean Bryan; H. C. Chiang; Carlo R. Contaldi; Brendan Crill; Olivier Doré; D. T. O'Dea; M. Farhang; J. P. Filippini; L. M. Fissel; N. N. Gandilo; S. R. Golwala; J. E. Gudmundsson; Matthew Hasselfield; M. Halpern; G. C. Hilton; Warren Holmes; Viktor V. Hristov; K. D. Irwin; W. C. Jones; C. L. Kuo; C. J. MacTavish; P. Mason

Here we describe the design and performance of the SPIDER instrument. SPIDER is a balloon-borne cosmic microwave background polarization imager that will map part of the sky at 90, 145, and 280 GHz with subdegree resolution and high sensitivity. This paper discusses the general design principles of the instrument inserts, mechanical structures, optics, focal plane architecture, thermal architecture, and magnetic shielding of the TES sensors and SQUID multiplexer. We also describe the optical, noise, and magnetic shielding performance of the 145 GHz prototype instrument insert.


The Astronomical Journal | 2012

Optical and X-ray observations of the merging cluster AS1063

Percy Luis Gomez; L. E. Valkonen; A. K. Romer; Edward Lloyd-Davies; T. Verdugo; C. M. Cantalupo; M. D. Daub; J. H. Goldstein; C. L. Kuo; A. E. Lange; M. Lueker; W. L. Holzapfel; J. B. Peterson; J. Ruhl; M. C. Runyan; C. L. Reichardt; Kivanc Sabirli

We present the first in-depth analysis of the massive cluster AS1063. This is one of the hottest X-ray clusters discovered to date and is undergoing a major merging event. The average temperature of the hot intracluster medium has been measured, using Chandra/ACIS-I, and found to be >11.5 keV. Optical spectroscopy, from GMOS-S, has provided a mean redshift of 0.3461 and a large velocity dispersion of 1840+230 – 150 km s–1. Both the large velocity dispersion and high X-ray temperature suggest a very massive cluster (M 200 > 2.5 × 1015 M ☉) and/or a merger system. The merger model is supported by a small offset between the galaxy density and the peak of the X-ray emission, the presence of offset and twisted X-ray isophotes, and a non-Gaussian galaxy velocity distribution. We also report that the velocity distribution is better represented by the velocity dispersion produced during a merger than by the velocity distribution of a relaxed cluster. Moreover, we find that two non-concentric beta models are a better description for the distribution of the cluster gas than a single beta model. Therefore, we propose that a recent merger event close to the plane of the sky is responsible for the observed properties of the cluster. In addition, optical imaging, from SuSI2 on the New Technology Telescope and GMOS-S at Gemini, has also uncovered the presence of several gravitational arcs that have been used to further constrain the mass and dynamics of the cluster.

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J. J. Bock

California Institute of Technology

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C. L. Kuo

University of California

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A. E. Lange

California Institute of Technology

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M. Halpern

University of British Columbia

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G. C. Hilton

National Institute of Standards and Technology

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M. Amiri

University of British Columbia

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J. E. Ruhl

University of California

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S. R. Golwala

California Institute of Technology

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