Physics:QMAP

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QMAP

QMAP was a balloon experiment to measure the anisotropy of the cosmic microwave background (CMB). It flew twice in 1996, and was used with an interlocking scan of the skies to produce CMB maps at angular scales between 0.7° and 9°.[1]

The gondola was later used for ground-based observations as the MAT/TOCO experiment; so named because the instrument was called the Mobile Anisotropy Telescope and it was positioned at Cerro Toco in the Chile an Andes.[2] It was the first such experiment to localize the position of the first acoustical peak in the CMB.[3]

See also

References

  1. Devlin, Mark; de Oliveira-Costa, Angelica; Herbig, Tom; Miller, Amber; Netterfield, Barth; Page, Lyman; Tegmark, Max (1998-12-20). "Mapping the CMB I: the first flight of the QMAP experiment". The Astrophysical Journal 509 (2): L69–L72. doi:10.1086/311769. 
  2. Torbet, E.; Devlin, M. J.; Dorwart, W. B.; Herbig, T. et al. (1999). "A Measurement of the Angular Power Spectrum of the Microwave Background Made from the High Chilean Andes". The Astrophysical Journal 521 (2): L79–L82. doi:10.1086/312197. Bibcode1999ApJ...521L..79T. 
  3. Miller, A.; Beach, J.; Bradley, S.; Caldwell, R. et al. (June 2002). "The QMAP and MAT/TOCO Experiments for Measuring Anisotropy in the Cosmic Microwave Background". The Astrophysical Journal Supplement Series 140 (2): 115–141. doi:10.1086/339686. Bibcode2002ApJS..140..115M.