Cosmic Microwave Background experiments need to measure polarization properties of the incoming radiation very accurately to achieve their scientific goals. As a result of that, it is necessary to properly characterize these instruments. However, there are not natural sources that can be used for this purpose. For this reason, we developed the PROTOtype CALibrator for Cosmology, PROTOCALC, which is a calibrator source designed for the 90 GHz band of these telescopes. This source is purely polarized and the direction of the polarization vector is known with an accuracy better than 0.1°. This source flew for the first time in May 2022 showing promising result.
KEYWORDS: Telescopes, Polarization, Metrology, Calibration, Photogrammetry, Signal detection, Sensors, Cameras, Observatories, Global Positioning System
We present results from efforts to build a drone-based calibration system providing a high-accuracy polarized reference signal for mm-wave telescopes mapping the cosmic microwave background. The multi-rotor drone allows the source to reach the far-field of small aperture telescopes, such as CLASS or SO-SATs, at their nominal elevation angle, providing a reference signal under normal observing conditions. The goal is to achieve calibration accuracy of at least 0.1 degrees on the absolute polarization angle response. Results from three flight campaigns at the CLASS site, Cerro Toco, Chile, tested the on-board metrology system, using GPS and photogrammetry to determine the source’s position and orientation during flight. The results indicate the drone’s position is known within 10 cm and its polarization angle to better than 0.05 degrees, meeting the system’s technical requirements.
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