Nettsider med emneord «BeyondPlanck»

portrettbildet av en smilende kvinne
Publisert 26. jan. 2024 11:42

Artem Basyrov, Cosmology and Extragalactic Astronomy research group, Institute of Theoretical Astrophysics, University of Oslo.

portrettbildet av en ung man
Publisert 7. feb. 2022 14:41

Mathew Galloway, Institute of Theoretical Astrophysics, University of Oslo.

illustrasjon av satellitten Planck i verdensrommet
Publisert 24. nov. 2020 13:19

Romteleskopet Planck har samla data om den kosmiske bakgrunnsstrålinga. Kosmologene ved ITA har brukt dataa til å utvikla metodar som kan gi svar på spørsmålet om korleis universet oppstod, om mørk materie og om mørk energi.

project logo with text "BeyondPlanck"in blue, orange, yellow, light blue.
Publisert 20. nov. 2020 10:44

Delivering state-of-the-art observations of the microwave sky from 30 to 70 GHz for the next decade.

polarized light from vibrating dust grains.
Publisert 18. nov. 2020 11:05

This BeyondPlanck paper presents new images of polarized emission from astrophysical sky components using never before combined data sets with a brand new approach.

colourful map of the CMB
Publisert 17. nov. 2020 10:54

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?

Correlated noise intensity map of CMB.
Publisert 16. nov. 2020 11:29

The BeyondPlanck collaboration has performed the most detailed analysis of the Planck Low Frequency Instrument (LFI) data to date, leading to a cleaner view of both the early universe and our own Milky Way.

colourful map of the CMB
Publisert 13. nov. 2020 13:47

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.

Image of the Cosmic Microwave background signal.
Publisert 12. nov. 2020 11:11

The BeyondPlanck collaboration chases faint signals in the cosmic microwave background (CMB), an echo from the Big Bang, with this novel approach.