Nettsider med emneord «Cosmic Microwave Background (CMB)»
This BeyondPlanck paper presents new images of polarized emission from astrophysical sky components using never before combined data sets with a brand new approach.
Instrumental calibration is vital for the results of a CMB experiment to make sense. But how can we calibrate the instrument using measurements that we ideally need to calibrate the instrument to measure properly?
Map-making of the Cosmic Microwave Background is an essential step that produces colourful 2D maps of the footprint of the early universe. Here cosmologists set the basis for the innovative map-making algorithm employed in BeyondPlanck.
The BeyondPlanck collaboration chases faint signals in the cosmic microwave background (CMB), an echo from the Big Bang, with this novel approach.
Doctoral candidate Håvard Tveit Ihle at the Institute of Theoretical Astrophysics, Faculty of Mathematics and Natural Sciences, is defending the thesis "Bayesian Data Analysis for Intensity Mapping and CMB Experiments" for the degree of Philosophiae Doctor.
Doctoral candidate Kristian Joten Andersen at the Institute of Theoretical Astrophysics, Faculty of Mathematics and Natural Sciences, is defending the thesis "Improved Planck processing through integrated component separation" for the degree of Philosophiae Doctor.
Doctoral candidate Kristian Joten Andersen at the Institute of Theoretical Astrophysics, Faculty of Mathematics and Natural Sciences, is defending the thesis "Closing the Loop, Joint Analysis of CMB Systematics and Foregrounds" for the degree of Philosophiae Doctor.
"The ability to do world class research and collaborate with other European researchers while at the same time experiencing a new culture is what really drew me to Oslo."
"From early age I've always loved the stars, and Astrophysics has always been my favourite part of physics."
"Norway is an incredibly beautiful country for its particularly supportive education system."
"There is something really compelling to me about cosmology in general, that we are able to answer philosophical questions quantitatively" - Duncan Watts.
"What motivates me in research is the hope that I can figure out something brand new in physics" - PhD student Johannes Røsok Eskilt.
First first stars were born during the universe' youth according to new radiation maps. Much later that first anticipated.
The Japanese Institute of Space and Astronautical Science has chosen for its next strategic mission LiteBIRD, a small space observatory. Six researches of the Institute of Theoretical Astrophysics are involved in the project.
Delivering state-of-the-art observations of the microwave sky from 30 to 70 GHz for the next decade.
Jón Gudmundsson, Senior Research Scientist at Stockholm University Physics Department and the Oskar Klein Centre for Cosmoparticle Physics
Thomas Montandon, Astroparticule et Cosmologie, Université Paris Diderot (France).
Duncan Watts, postdoctoral fellow at Institute of Theoretical Astrophysics, UiO.
Johannes Røsok Eskilt, phd fellow at Institute of Theoretical Astrophysics, UiO.