In-Flight Performance of Spider’s 280 GHz Receivers

Kavli Affiliate: Chao-Lin Kuo

| First 5 Authors: Elle C. Shaw, P. A. R. Ade, S. Akers, M. Amiri, J. Austermann

| Summary:

SPIDER is a balloon-borne instrument designed to map the cosmic microwave
background at degree-angular scales in the presence of Galactic foregrounds.
SPIDER has mapped a large sky area in the Southern Hemisphere using more than
2000 transition-edge sensors (TESs) during two NASA Long Duration Balloon
flights above the Antarctic continent. During its first flight in January 2015,
SPIDER observed in the 95 GHz and 150 GHz frequency bands, setting constraints
on the B-mode signature of primordial gravitational waves. Its second flight in
the 2022-23 season added new receivers at 280 GHz, each using an array of TESs
coupled to the sky through feedhorns formed from stacks of silicon wafers.
These receivers are optimized to produce deep maps of polarized Galactic dust
emission over a large sky area, providing a unique data set with lasting value
to the field. In this work, we describe the instrument’s performance during
SPIDER’s second flight.

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