+++ to secure your transactions use the Bitcoin Mixer Service +++

 

Dipartimento di Fisica - Universita' di Roma La Sapienza
logos
logo
B2K: Measurements of CMB Polarization with BOOMERanG
See also BOOMERanG 98 web site.


FIRST B2K DATA RELEASE - JULY 2005

COMUNICATO STAMPA - LUGLIO 2005




B2K is an experiment to study the Cosmic Microwave Background (CMB), the weak fossil remnant of the first light produced in the universe, about 15 billion years ago.

B2K uses a microwave telescope on board of a stratospheric balloon to map the intensity and polarization of the CMB.

B2K inherits the technologies of the BOOMERanG experiment, which was flown in 1998 and produced in 2000 high quality maps of the CMB. From these maps we estimated the average density of the Universe and other cosmological parameters.

The polarization of the CMB, i.e. the direction of oscillation of its electromagnetic waves, is a novel measurement, and will allow us to constrain the initial conditions and the nature of primordial density fluctuations.

B2K has been launched on Jan.6 2003, at 05:00 UT. After about 10 days of good data taking, we had to shut down because the balloon lost altitude each day. This did not affect our ability to make very clean measurements of CMB polarization. But eventually the shear winds were too strong (at about 70kft) to control the telescope pointing. The gradually falling payload altitude led to termination on Jan. 21, on the side of the continent farthest from McMurdo. We hope to recover the pressure vessel with the data this season, though this is non-trivial. In the meantime, we have the (lower bandwidth) satellite-transmitted data from the whole flight in hand, which we believe is an extremely interesting dataset. Analysis has already started.

- SCIENCE BACKGROUND AND MISSION
- THE B2K INSTRUMENT
- THE ANTARCTIC CAMPAIGN 2002-2003
- THE TEAM
- B2K PAPERS





See also the other BOOMERanG web pages
Caltech
CWRU
University of Toronto