We have reported here an extensive study of the 1/f noise contamination for different scanning strategies, beam location on the focal plane as well as for different values of the knee frequency. Even in this idealised situation (all other systematics are well under control) we can gain useful information from our study.
First of all from these simulations it seems that moving the spin-axis away from the ecliptic plane does not significantly help the destriping efficiency for typical LFI beam locations and, concerning the 1/f noise alone as source of drifts, it would be preferable to keep the spin-axis always on the Ecliptic plane. This is clear when we compare results as those in the bottom panels of Fig. 2 and Fig. 5 which are practically identical.
Furthermore for most of the LFI beams the choice of
would
be acceptable: the destriping left only
of excess noise with
respect to the pure white noise case. On the other hand, some LFI beams are
equivalent to on-axis beam which, from the bottom panel of Fig. 6,
is clearly a degenerate case. A smaller value of
(namely 85
)
breaks this
degeneracy at an acceptable level yielding the usual destriping
efficiency. From these two points an indication of a possible choice of
the scanning strategy and instrument configuration arises: with
and precession of the spin-axis (no thermal drifts) with
only 5
amplitude (half of what we considered here)
appears satisfactory for de-striping performances while preserving
full-sky coverage for all channels. This allows data redundancy but
introduces irregularities in the integration time distribution,
which may be an issue for the data analysis. Without spin axis
modulations, a quite complete sky coverage and a smooth integration
time distribution at each frequency can be achieved only by assembling
data from different receivers, losing redundancy.
The whole set of simulations seems to indicate that there is enough redundancy
of observations to remove at acceptable level the contamination due to
1/f noise even if we require a more strict condition of crossings between
scan circles.
Of course, the performance of this destriping code could be partially
optimized in the future by appropriately choosing the number of levels
per circle and the crossing condition according to the dominant
kind of instrumental noise (the parameters
and
),
the magnitude of the gradients in the sky emission and our
knowledge of other contamination sources. Another point to mention
is the possibility of jointly destriping the data from two or more feeds
at the same frequency but differently located on the sky field of
view: this will enlarge the dimension of the system in
Eq. (4) that have to be
solved and then RAM requirements. Although feeds in different
locations in the focal plane will have different beam shapes and main
beam distortions may introduce extra-noise, this is an interesting
point particularly with respect "degenerate'' feed positions and will
be addressed in a future work.
For what concerns properly the 1/f noise, an important
indication comes from the simulation with
Hz: the excess of noise before destriping reduces by a
factor
with respect to the case
Hz,
indicating a possible linear relation between the additional rms and
knee-frequency.
In addition the extra noise level after destriping decreases, at
least under these ideal assumptions, by a factor
.
The
source of this extra noise after destriping is probably partially due
to the 1/f noise on time-scales less than the spin-rate. This can be
see when comparing the level of extra noise, after destriping, for the
Hz and
Hz cases, values larger and smaller
than
respectively.
There are many open issues both astrophysical and instrumental. Regarding the first, the microwave emission model we use, although pessimistic for what concerns galactic emission, can be completed with the inclusion of different foreground contributions. The emission from extragalactic point sources and in particular their variability may decrease our destriping efficiency. We have also not considered here any other source of possible systematic effects such as thermal effects, main beam distortions and stray-light contamination induced by Galaxy emission. These effects may in principle degrade the accuracy in removing 1/f noise stripes, by introducing systematic differences in the temperatures observed in the crossing points used in the destriping algorithm: a preliminary analysis of simulations with an elliptical Gaussian beam (instead of the circular symmetry one considered in this work) with a 1.7 ratio between major and minor axis, indicates a small impact of a such effect on the destriping efficiency. A more comprehensive analysis of the impact of these classes of effects, of their relative weight and of their coupling with the 1/f noise will be presented in a future work (Burigana et al.[1999]).
As proved by the scientific experience in many years of work
in physics, in cosmology and astrophysics, efficient data
analysis tools can significantly improve the quality of the information
extracted from the data, provided that the systematic effects are well
understood, but the first and most important step in projecting
experiments is to reduce all the contaminations at the lowest possible levels.
It is then of great importance to decrease as much as possible the impact
of 1/f noise before destriping and
Hz is an important
goal for instrument studies and prototypes.
Acknowledgements
We gratefully acknowledge stimulating and helpful discussions with L. Danese, J. Delabrouille and M. Seiffert. We also thank the referee for his useful comments which helped to make this paper much more clear and readable.
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