The Atacama Cosmology Telescope: Modeling bulk atmospheric motion
Date
2022Author
Morris, Thomas W.
Bustos, Ricardo
Calabrese, Erminia
Choi, Steve K.
Duivenvoorden, Adriaan J.
Dunkley, Jo
Dünner, Rolando
Gallardo, Patricio A.
Hasselfield, Matthew
Hincks, Adam D.
Mroczkowski, Tony
Naess, Sigurd
Niemack, Michael D.
Page, Lyman
Partridge, Bruce
Salatino, Maria
Staggs, Suzanne
Treu, Jesse
Wollack, Edward J.
Xu, Zhilei
Publisher
Physical Review DDescription
Artículo de publicación WOS - SCOPUSMetadata
Show full item recordAbstract
Fluctuating atmospheric emission is a dominant source of noise for ground-based millimeter-wave
observations of the cosmic microwave background (CMB) temperature anisotropy at angular scales ≳0.5°.
We present a model of the atmosphere as a discrete set of emissive turbulent layers that move with respect to
the observer with a horizontal wind velocity. After introducing a statistic derived from the time-lag dependent
correlation function for detector pairs in an array, referred to as the pair-lag, we use this model to estimate the
aggregate angular motion of the atmosphere derived from time-ordered data from the Atacama Cosmology
Telescope (ACT). We find that estimates derived from ACT’s CMB observations alone agree with those
derived from satellite weather data that additionally include a height-dependent horizontal wind velocity and
water vapor density. We also explore the dependence of the measured atmospheric noise spectrum on the
relative angle between the wind velocity and the telescope scan direction. In particular, we find that varying
the scan velocity changes the noise spectrum in a predictable way. Computing the pair-lag statistic opens up
new avenues for understanding how atmospheric fluctuations impact measurements of the CMB anisotropy.