P. D. Jackson
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The Astrophysical Journal | 1996
C. L. Bennett; A.J. Banday; D. T. Wilkinson; E. L. Wright; P. Keegstra; George F. Smoot; P. D. Jackson; G. Hinshaw; A. Kogut; Krzysztof M. Gorski
In this Letter we present a summary of the spatial properties of the cosmic microwave background radiation based on the full 4 yr of COBE Differential Microwave Radiometer (DMR) observations, with additional details in a set of companion Letters. The anisotropy is consistent with a scale-invariant power-law model and Gaussian statistics. With full use of the multifrequency 4 yr DMR data, including our estimate of the effects of Galactic emission, we find a power-law spectral index of n = 1.2 ± 0.3 and a quadrupole normalization Qrms-PS = 15.3−2.8+3.8 μK. For n = 1 the best-fit normalization is Qrms-PS|n=1 = 18 ± 1.6 μK. These values are consistent with both our previous 1 yr and 2 yr results. The results include use of the l = 2 quadrupole term; exclusion of this term gives consistent results, but with larger uncertainties. The final DMR 4 yr sky maps, presented in this Letter, portray an accurate overall visual impression of the anisotropy since the signal-to-noise ratio is ~2 per 10° sky map patch. The improved signal-to-noise ratio of the 4 yr maps also allows for improvements in Galactic modeling and limits on non-Gaussian statistics.
The Astrophysical Journal | 1993
A. Kogut; C. Lineweaver; George F. Smoot; C. L. Bennett; A. J. Banday; N. W. Boggess; Edward S. Cheng; G. De Amici; Dale J. Fixsen; G. Hinshaw; P. D. Jackson; Michael A. Janssen; P. Keegstra; K. Loewenstein; P. M. Lubin; John C. Mather; L. Tenorio; Ron Weiss; D. T. Wilkinson; E. L. Wright
We present a determination of the cosmic microwave background dipole amplitude and direction from the COBE Differential Microwave Radiometers (DMR) first year of data. Data from the six DMR channels are consistent with a Doppler-shifted Planck function of dipole amplitude ΔT=3.365±0.027 mK toward direction (l II , b II )=(264°.4±0°.3, 48°.4±0°.5). The implied velocity of the Local Group with respect to the CMB rest frame is v LG =627±22 km s −1 toward (l II , b II )=(276°±3°, 30°±3°). DMR has also mapped the dipole anisotropy resulting from the Earths orbital motion about the Solar system barycenter, yielding a measurement of the monopole CMB temperature T 0 at 31.5, 53, and 90 GHz, T 0 =2.75±0.05 KWe present a determination of the cosmic microwave background dipole amplitude and direction from the COBE Differential Microwave Radiometers (DMR) first year of data. Data from the six DMR channels are consistent with a Doppler-shifted Planck function of dipole amplitude Delta T = 3.365 +/-0.027 mK toward direction (l,b) = (264.4 +/- 0.3 deg, 48.4 +/- 0.5 deg). The implied velocity of the Local Group with respect to the CMB rest frame is 627 +/- 22 km/s toward (l,b) = (276 +/- 3 deg, 30 +/- 3 deg). DMR has also mapped the dipole anisotropy resulting from the Earths orbital motion about the Solar system barycenter, yielding a measurement of the monopole CMB temperature at 31.5, 53, and 90 GHz, to be 2.75 +/- 0.05 K.
The Astrophysical Journal | 1994
C. L. Bennett; E. Kaita; John C. Mather; E. S. Cheng; K. M. Górski; D. T. Wilkinson; E. L. Wright; P. D. Jackson; George F. Smoot; Ron Weiss; P. M. Lubin; G. Hinshaw; K. Loewenstein; A. Kogut; C. Lineweaver; P. Keegstra; S. S. Meyer; A. J. Banday
The first two years of COBE DMR observations of the CMB anisotropy are analyzed and compared with our previously published first year results. The results are consistent, but the addition of the second year of data increases the precision and accuracy of the detected CMB temperature fluctuations. The two-year 53 GHz data are characterized by RMS temperature fluctuations of DT=44+/-7 uK at 7 degrees and DT=30.5+/-2.7 uK at 10 degrees angular resolution. The 53X90 GHz cross-correlation amplitude at zero lag is C(0)^{1/2}=36+/-5 uK (68%CL) for the unsmoothed 7 degree DMR data. A likelihood analysis of the cross correlation function, including the quadrupole anisotropy, gives a most likely quadrupole-normalized amplitude Q_{rms-PS}=12.4^{+5.2}_{-3.3} uK (68% CL) and a spectral index n=1.59^{+0.49}_{-0.55} for a power law model of initial density fluctuations, P(k)~k^n. With n fixed to 1.0 the most likely amplitude is 17.4 +/-1.5 uK (68% CL). Excluding the quadrupole anisotropy we find Q_{rms-PS}= 16.0^{+7.5}_{-5.2} uK (68% CL), n=1.21^{+0.60}_{-0.55}, and, with n fixed to 1.0 the most likely amplitude is 18.2+/-1.6 uK (68% CL). Monte Carlo simulations indicate that these derived estimates of n may be biased by ~+0.3 (with the observed low value of the quadrupole included in the analysis) and {}~+0.1 (with the quadrupole excluded). Thus the most likely bias-corrected estimate of n is between 1.1 and 1.3. Our best estimate of the dipole from the two-year DMR data is 3.363+/-0.024 mK towards Galactic coordinates (l,b)= (264.4+/-0.2 degrees, +48.1+/-0.4 degrees), and our best estimate of the RMS quadrupole amplitude in our sky is 6+/-3 uK.The first two years of COBE DMR observations of the CMB anisotropy are analyzed and compared with our previously published first year results. The results are consistent, but the addition of the second year of data increases the precision and accuracy of the detected CMB temperature fluctuations. The two-year 53 GHz data are characterized by RMS temperature fluctuations of DT=44+/-7 uK at 7 degrees and DT=30.5+/-2.7 uK at 10 degrees angular resolution. The 53X90 GHz cross-correlation amplitude at zero lag is C(0)^{1/2}=36+/-5 uK (68%CL) for the unsmoothed 7 degree DMR data. A likelihood analysis of the cross correlation function, including the quadrupole anisotropy, gives a most likely quadrupole-normalized amplitude Q_{rms-PS}=12.4^{+5.2}_{-3.3} uK (68% CL) and a spectral index n=1.59^{+0.49}_{-0.55} for a power law model of initial density fluctuations, P(k)~k^n. With n fixed to 1.0 the most likely amplitude is 17.4 +/-1.5 uK (68% CL). Excluding the quadrupole anisotropy we find Q_{rms-PS}= 16.0^{+7.5}_{-5.2} uK (68% CL), n=1.21^{+0.60}_{-0.55}, and, with n fixed to 1.0 the most likely amplitude is 18.2+/-1.6 uK (68% CL). Monte Carlo simulations indicate that these derived estimates of n may be biased by ~+0.3 (with the observed low value of the quadrupole included in the analysis) and {}~+0.1 (with the quadrupole excluded). Thus the most likely bias-corrected estimate of n is between 1.1 and 1.3. Our best estimate of the dipole from the two-year DMR data is 3.363+/-0.024 mK towards Galactic coordinates (l,b)= (264.4+/-0.2 degrees, +48.1+/-0.4 degrees), and our best estimate of the RMS quadrupole amplitude in our sky is 6+/-3 uK.
The Astrophysical Journal | 1996
C. L. Bennett; A. J. Banday; K. M. Górski; G. Hinshaw; P. D. Jackson; P. Keegstra; A. Kogut; George F. Smoot; D. T. Wilkinson; E. L. Wright
In this Letter we present a summary of the spatial properties of the cosmic microwave background radiation based on the full 4 yr of COBE Differential Microwave Radiometer (DMR) observations, with additional details in a set of companion Letters. The anisotropy is consistent with a scale-invariant power-law model and Gaussian statistics. With full use of the multifrequency 4 yr DMR data, including our estimate of the effects of Galactic emission, we find a power-law spectral index of n = 1.2 ± 0.3 and a quadrupole normalization Qrms-PS = 15.3−2.8+3.8 μK. For n = 1 the best-fit normalization is Qrms-PS|n=1 = 18 ± 1.6 μK. These values are consistent with both our previous 1 yr and 2 yr results. The results include use of the l = 2 quadrupole term; exclusion of this term gives consistent results, but with larger uncertainties. The final DMR 4 yr sky maps, presented in this Letter, portray an accurate overall visual impression of the anisotropy since the signal-to-noise ratio is ~2 per 10° sky map patch. The improved signal-to-noise ratio of the 4 yr maps also allows for improvements in Galactic modeling and limits on non-Gaussian statistics.
The Astrophysical Journal | 1996
A. Kogut; A.J. Banday; C. L. Bennett; Krzysztof M. Gorski; G. Hinshaw; P. D. Jackson; Phil B. Keegstra; C. Lineweaver; George F. Smoot; L. Tenorio; E. L. Wright
The Differential Microwave Radiometers (DMR) instrument aboard the Cosmic Background Explorer (COBE) has mapped the full microwave sky to mean sensitivity 26 mu K per 7 degrees held of view. The absolute calibration is determined to 0.7 percent with drifts smaller than 0.2 percent per year. We have analyzed both the raw differential data and the pixelized sky maps for evidence of contaminating sources such as solar system foregrounds, instrumental susceptibilities, and artifacts from data recovery and processing. Most systematic effects couple only weakly to the sky maps. The largest uncertainties in the maps result from the instrument susceptibility to Earths magnetic field, microwave emission from Earth, and upper limits to potential effects at the spacecraft spin period. Systematic effects in the maps are small compared to either the noise or the celestial signal: the 95 percent confidence upper limit for the pixel-pixel rms from all identified systematics is less than 6 mu K in the worst channel. A power spectrum analysis of the (A-B)/2 difference maps shows no evidence for additional undetected systematic effects.
The Astrophysical Journal | 1992
A. Kogut; George F. Smoot; C. L. Bennett; E. L. Wright; J. Aymon; G. De Amici; G. Hinshaw; P. D. Jackson; E. Kaita; P. Keegstra; C. Lineweaver; K. Loewenstein; L. Rokke; L. Tenorio; N. W. Boggess; Edward S. Cheng; Samuel Gulkis; Michael G. Hauser; Michael A. Janssen; T. Kelsall; John C. Mather; S. S. Meyer; S. H. Moseley; Thomas L. Murdock; Richard A. Shafer; R. F. Silverberg; Rainer Weiss; D. T. Wilkinson
The Differential Microwave Radiometers (DMR) instrument aboard the Cosmic Background Explorer (COBE) maps the full microwave sky in order to measure the large-angular-scale anisotropy of the cosmic microwave background radiation. Solar system foreground sources, instrumental effects, as well as data recovery and processing, can combine to create statistically significant artifacts in the analyzed data. We discuss the techniques available for the identification and subtraction of these effects from the DMR data and present preliminary limits on their magnitude in the DMR 1 yr maps (Smoot et al. 1992)
The Astrophysical Journal | 1992
C. L. Bennett; George F. Smoot; Michael A. Janssen; Samuel Gulkis; A. Kogut; G. Hinshaw; C. Backus; Michael G. Hauser; John C. Mather; L. Rokke; L. Tenorio; Ron Weiss; D. T. Wilkinson; E. L. Wright; G. De Amici; N. W. Boggess; Edward S. Cheng; P. D. Jackson; P. Keegstra; T. Kelsall; R. Kummerer; C. Lineweaver; S. H. Moseley; Thomas L. Murdock; J. Santana; Richard A. Shafer; R. F. Silverberg
The COBE spacecraft was launched November 18, 1989 UT carrying three scientific instruments into earth orbit for studies of cosmology. One of these instruments, the Differential Microwave Radiometer (DMR), is designed to measure the large-angular-scale temperature anisotropy of the cosmic microwave background radiation at three frequencies (31.5, 53, and 90 GHz). This paper presents three methods used to calibrate the DMR. First, the signal difference between beam-filling hot and cold targets observed on the ground provides a primary calibration that is transferred to space by noise sources internal to the instrument. Second, the moon is used in flight as an external calibration source. Third, the signal arising from the Doppler effect due to the earths motion around the barycenter of the solar system is used as an external calibration source. Preliminary analysis of the external source calibration techniques confirms the accuracy of the currently more precise ground-based calibration. Assuming the noise source behavior did not change from the ground-based calibration to flight, a 0.1-0.4 percent relative and 0.7-2.5 percent absolute calibration uncertainty is derived, depending on radiometer channel.
Advances in Space Research | 1991
George F. Smoot; C. L. Bennett; A. Kogut; J. Aymon; C. Backus; G. De Amici; K. Galuk; P. D. Jackson; P. Keegstra; L. Rokke; L. Tenorio; S. Torres; S. G. Gulkis; M.G. Hauser; Michael A. Janssen; John C. Mather; Rainer Weiss; D. T. Wilkinson; E. L. Wright; N. W. Boggess; Edward S. Cheng; T. Kelsall; P. M. Lubin; Stephan S. Meyer; S. H. Moseley; Thomas L. Murdock; Richard A. Shafer; R. F. Silverberg
Abstract We review the concept and operation of the Differential Microwave Radiometers (DMR) instrument aboard NASAs Cosmic Background Explorer (COBE) satellite, with emphasis on the software identification and subtraction of potential systematic effects. We present preliminary results obtained from the first six months of DMR data and discuss implications for cosmology.
AIP Conference Proceedings (American Institute of Physics); (United States) | 1991
George F. Smoot; C. L. Bennett; A. Kogut; J. Aymon; C. Backus; G. De Amici; K. Galuk; P. D. Jackson; P. Keegstra; L. Rokke; L. Tenorio; S. G. Gulkis; Michael G. Hauser; Michael A. Janssen; John C. Mather; Rainer Weiss; D. T. Wilkinson; E. L. Wright; N. W. Boggess; Edward S. Cheng; T. Kelsall; P. M. Lubin; Stephan S. Meyer; S. H. Moseley; Thomas L. Murdock; Richard A. Shafer; R. F. Silverberg
The COBE Differential Microwave Radiometers (DMR) instrument has produced preliminary full-sky maps at frequencies 31.5, 53, and 90 GHz. The redundant channels and matched beams at three frequencies distinguish the DMR from previous large-scale surveys. Galactic emission is seen unambiguously at all three frequencies. The only large-scale anisotropy detected in the cosmic microwave background is the dipole anisotropy. There is no clear evidence for any other large-angular-scale feature in the maps. Without correcting for any systematic effects, we are able to place limits {Delta}T/T{sub 0}{lt}3{times}10{sup {minus}5} for the rms quadrupole amplitude, {Delta}T/T{sub 0}{lt}4{times}10{sup {minus}5} for monochromatic fluctuations, and {Delta}T/T{sub 0}{lt}4{times}10{sup {minus}5} for Gaussian fluctuations (all limits are 95% C.L. with T{sub 0}=2.735 K). The data limit {Delta}T/T{sub 0}{lt}10{sup {minus}4} for any feature larger than 7{degree}. We briefly review the DMR and discuss some implications of these results for cosmology.
The Astrophysical Journal | 1996
C. L. Bennett; A. J. Banday; K. M. Górski; G. Hinshaw; P. D. Jackson; P. Keegstra; A. Kogut; George F. Smoot; D. T. Wilkinson; E. L. Wright
In this Letter we present a summary of the spatial properties of the cosmic microwave background radiation based on the full 4 yr of COBE Differential Microwave Radiometer (DMR) observations, with additional details in a set of companion Letters. The anisotropy is consistent with a scale-invariant power-law model and Gaussian statistics. With full use of the multifrequency 4 yr DMR data, including our estimate of the effects of Galactic emission, we find a power-law spectral index of n = 1.2 ± 0.3 and a quadrupole normalization Qrms-PS = 15.3−2.8+3.8 μK. For n = 1 the best-fit normalization is Qrms-PS|n=1 = 18 ± 1.6 μK. These values are consistent with both our previous 1 yr and 2 yr results. The results include use of the l = 2 quadrupole term; exclusion of this term gives consistent results, but with larger uncertainties. The final DMR 4 yr sky maps, presented in this Letter, portray an accurate overall visual impression of the anisotropy since the signal-to-noise ratio is ~2 per 10° sky map patch. The improved signal-to-noise ratio of the 4 yr maps also allows for improvements in Galactic modeling and limits on non-Gaussian statistics.