Atacama Cosmology Telescope
Telescope in the Atacama Desert, northern Chile / From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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The Atacama Cosmology Telescope (ACT) was a cosmological millimeter-wave telescope located on Cerro Toco in the Atacama Desert in the north of Chile.[1] ACT made high-sensitivity, arcminute resolution, microwave-wavelength surveys of the sky in order to study the cosmic microwave background radiation (CMB), the relic radiation left by the Big Bang process. Located 40 km from San Pedro de Atacama, at an altitude of 5,190 metres (17,030 ft), it was one of the highest ground-based telescopes in the world.[lower-alpha 1]
Alternative names | ACTpol |
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Part of | Llano de Chajnantor Observatory |
Location(s) | Atacama Desert |
Coordinates | 22°57′31″S 67°47′15″W |
Wavelength | 28, 41, 90, 150, 220 GHz (1.07, 0.73, 0.33, 0.20, 0.14 cm) |
First light | 22 October 2007 |
Telescope style | cosmic microwave background experiment radio telescope |
Diameter | 6 meter |
Website | act |
Related media on Commons | |
Cosmic microwave background experiments like ACT, the South Pole Telescope, the WMAP satellite, and the Planck satellite have provided foundational evidence for the standard Lambda-CDM model of cosmology. ACT first detected seven acoustic peaks in the power spectrum of the CMB, discovered the most extreme galaxy cluster and made the first statistical detection of the motions of clusters of galaxies via the pairwise kinematic Sunyaev-Zeldovich Effect.[3]
ACT was buit in 2007 and saw first light on October 2007 with its first receiver, the Millimeter Bolometer Array Camera (MBAC). ACT has had two major receiver upgrades which enabled polarization sensitive observations: ACTPol[4] (2013-2016) and Advanced ACT[5] (2017-2022). ACT observations ended in mid-2022. ACT is funded by the US National Science Foundation.