Skip to main navigation Skip to search Skip to main content

The Simons Observatory: Quantifying the impact of beam chromaticity on large-scale B-mode science

  • Nadia Dachlythra
  • , Kevin Wolz
  • , Susanna Azzoni
  • , David Alonso
  • , Adriaan J. Duivenvoorden
  • , Alexandre E. Adler
  • , Jon E. Gudmundsson
  • , Carlo Baccigalupi
  • , Alessandro Carones
  • , Gabriele Coppi
  • , Samuel Day-Weiss
  • , Josquin Errard
  • , Nicholas Galitzki
  • , Martina Gerbino
  • , Remington G. Gerras
  • , Carlos Hervias-Caimapo
  • , Selim C. Hotinli
  • , Federico Nati
  • , Bruce Partridge
  • , Yoshinori Sueno
  • Edward J. Wollack

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

The Simons Observatory (SO) Small Aperture Telescopes (SATs) will observe the Cosmic Microwave Background (CMB) temperature and polarization at six frequency bands. Within these bands, the angular response of the telescope (beam) is convolved with the instrument's spectral response (commonly called bandpass) and the signal from the sky, which leads to the band-averaged telescope beam response, which is sampled and digitized. The spectral properties of the band-averaged beam depend on the natural variation of the beam within the band, referred to as beam chromaticity. In this paper, we quantify the impact of the interplay of beam chromaticity and intrinsic frequency scaling from the various components that dominate the polarized sky emission on the tensor-to-scalar ratio, r, and foreground parameters. We do so by employing a parametric power-spectrum-based foreground component separation algorithm, namely BBPower, to which we provide beam-convolved time domain simulations performed with the beamconv software while assuming an idealized version of the SO SAT optics. We find a small, 0.02σ, bias on r, due to beam chromaticity, which seems to mostly impact the dust spatial parameters, causing a maximum 0.77σ bias on the dust B-mode spectra amplitude, Ad , when employing Gaussian foreground simulations. However, we find all parameter biases to be smaller than 1σ at all times, independently of the foreground model. This includes the case where we introduce additional uncertainty on the bandpass shape, which accounts for approximately half of the total allowed gain uncertainty, as estimated in previous work for the SO SATs.

Original languageEnglish
Article number005
JournalJournal of Cosmology and Astroparticle Physics
Volume2025
Issue number10
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 1 Oct 2025

Bibliographical note

Publisher Copyright: © 2025 The Author(s)

Other keywords

  • CMBR detectors
  • CMBR experiments
  • cosmological parameters from CMBR
  • gravitational waves and CMBR polarization

Fingerprint

Dive into the research topics of 'The Simons Observatory: Quantifying the impact of beam chromaticity on large-scale B-mode science'. Together they form a unique fingerprint.

Cite this