The authors produce a new all-sky Galactic emission model with synchrotron amplitude at 4.76 GHz roughly twice the Planck 2015 value, derived via Commander fitting to recent radio and microwave surveys.
The C-Band All-Sky Survey (C-BASS): Design and capabilities
2 Pith papers cite this work. Polarity classification is still indexing.
abstract
The C-Band All-Sky Survey (C-BASS) is an all-sky full-polarisation survey at a frequency of 5 GHz, designed to provide complementary data to the all-sky surveys of WMAP and Planck, and future CMB B-mode polarization imaging surveys. The observing frequency has been chosen to provide a signal that is dominated by Galactic synchrotron emission, but suffers little from Faraday rotation, so that the measured polarization directions provide a good template for higher frequency observations, and carry direct information about the Galactic magnetic field. Telescopes in both northern and southern hemispheres with matched optical performance are used to provide all-sky coverage from a ground-based experiment. A continuous-comparison radiometer and a correlation polarimeter on each telescope provide stable imaging properties such that all angular scales from the instrument resolution of 45 arcmin up to full sky are accurately measured. The northern instrument has completed its survey and the southern instrument has started observing. We expect that C-BASS data will significantly improve the component separation analysis of Planck and other CMB data, and will provide important constraints on the properties of anomalous Galactic dust and the Galactic magnetic field.
fields
astro-ph.GA 2years
2026 2verdicts
UNVERDICTED 2representative citing papers
This review summarizes evidence for anomalous microwave emission and projects how SKA observations will identify its carriers and mechanisms in Galactic and extragalactic environments.
citing papers explorer
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All-sky modeling of Galactic emission at radio and microwave frequencies
The authors produce a new all-sky Galactic emission model with synchrotron amplitude at 4.76 GHz roughly twice the Planck 2015 value, derived via Commander fitting to recent radio and microwave surveys.
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Probing Anomalous Microwave Emission with the Square Kilometre Array
This review summarizes evidence for anomalous microwave emission and projects how SKA observations will identify its carriers and mechanisms in Galactic and extragalactic environments.