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Planck pre-launch status: the optical architecture of the HFI

Planck pre-launch status: the optical architecture of the HFI

Publication date: 10 July 2010

Authors: The Planck collaboration, Ade, P.A.R., et al.

Journal: Astronomy & Astrophysics
Volume: 520
Issue: A11
Page: 7
Year: 2010

Copyright: ESO

A&A doi http://dx.doi.org/10.1051/0004-6361/200913039

The Planck High Frequency Instrument, HFI, has been designed to allow a clear unobscured view of the CMB sky through an off-axis Gregorian telescope. The prime science target is to measure the polarized anisotropy of the CMB with a sensitivity of 1 part in 106 with a maximum spatial resolution of 5 arcmin (Cl ~ 3000) in four spectral bands with two further high-frequency channels measuring total power for foreground removal. These requirements place critical constraints on both the telescope configuration and the receiver coupling and require precise determination of the spectral and spatial characteristics at the pixel level, whilst maintaining control of the polarisation. To meet with the sensitivity requirements, the focal plane needs to be cooled with the optics at a few Kelvin and detectors at 100 mK. To limit inherent instrumental thermal emission and difraction effects, there is no vacuum window, so the detector feedhorns view the telescope secondary directly. This requires that the instrument is launched warm with the cooler chain only being activated during its cruise to L2. Here we present the novel optical configuration designed to meet with all the above criteria.

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