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Creators/Authors contains: "Wollack, Edward"

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  1. We present a joint analysis of the cosmic microwave background (CMB) lensing power spectra measured from the Data Release 6 of the Atacama Cosmology Telescope (ACT) and PR4, cross-correlations between the ACT and lensing reconstruction and galaxy clustering from unWISE, and the unWISE clustering auto-spectrum. We obtain 1.5% constraints on the matter density fluctuations at late times parametrized by the best constrained parameter combination S 8 3 x 2 pt σ 8 ( Ω m / 0.3 ) 0.4 = 0.815 ± 0.012 . The commonly used S 8 σ 8 ( Ω m / 0.3 ) 0.5 parameter is constrained to S 8 = 0.816 ± 0.015 . In combination with baryon acoustic oscillation (BAO) measurements we find σ 8 = 0.815 ± 0.012 . We also present sound-horizon-independent estimates of the present day Hubble rate of H 0 = 66.4 3.7 + 3.2 km s 1 Mpc 1 from our large scale structure data alone and H 0 = 64.3 2.4 + 2.1 km s 1 Mpc 1 in combination with uncalibrated supernovae from . Using parametric estimates of the evolution of matter density fluctuations, we place constraints on cosmic structure in a range of high redshifts typically inaccessible with cross-correlation analyses. Combining lensing cross- and autocorrelations, we derive a 3.3% constraint on the integrated matter density fluctuations above z = 2.4 , one of the tightest constraints in this redshift range and fully consistent with a Λ cold dark matter ( Λ CDM ) model fit to the primary CMB from . Finally, combining with primary CMB observations and using the extended low redshift coverage of these combined datasets we derive constraints on a variety of extensions to the Λ CDM model including massive neutrinos, spatial curvature, and dark energy. We find in flat Λ CDM m ν < 0.12 eV at 95% confidence using the large scale structure data, BAO measurements from Sloan Digital Sky Survey, and primary CMB observations. 
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    Free, publicly-accessible full text available April 1, 2026
  2. Abstract We present the in-lab and on-sky performance for the upgraded 90 GHz focal plane of the Cosmology Large Angular Scale Surveyor, which had four of its seven detector wafers updated during the austral winter of 2022. The update aimed to improve the transition-edge-sensor (TES) stability and bias range and to realize the high optical efficiency of the sensor design. Modifications included revised circuit terminations, electrical contact between the TES superconductor and the normal metal providing the bulk of the bolometer heat capacity, and additional filtering on the TES bias lines. The upgrade was successful: 94% of detectors are stable down to 15% of the normal resistance, providing a wide overlapping range of bias voltages for all TESs on a wafer. The median telescope efficiency improved from 0.4 2 0.22 + 0.15 to 0.6 0 0.32 + 0.10 (68% quantiles). For the four upgraded wafers alone, median telescope efficiency increased to 0.6 5 0.06 + 0.06 . Given our efficiency estimate for the receiver optics, this telescope efficiency implies a detector efficiency exceeding 0.90. The overall noise-equivalent temperature of the 90 GHz focal plane improved from 19 μ K s to 9.7 μ K s
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    Free, publicly-accessible full text available June 1, 2026
  3. Abstract We discuss the model of astrophysical emission at millimeter wavelengths used to characterize foregrounds in the multi-frequency power spectra of the Atacama Cosmology Telescope (ACT) Data Release 6 (DR6), expanding on Louis et al. (2025) (2503.14452). We detail several tests to validate the capability of the DR6 parametric foreground model to describe current observations and complex simulations, and show that cosmological parameter constraints are robust against model extensions and variations. We demonstrate consistency of the model with pre-DR6 ACT data and observations fromPlanckand the South Pole Telescope. We evaluate the implications of using different foreground templates and extending the model with new components and/or free parameters. In all scenarios, the DR6 ΛCDM and ΛCDM+Neffcosmological parameters shift by less than 0.5σrelative to the baseline constraints. Some foreground parameters shift more; we estimate their systematic uncertainties associated with modeling choices. From our constraint on the kinematic Sunyaev-Zel'dovich power, we obtain a conservative limit on the duration of reionization of Δzrei< 4.4, assuming a reionization midpoint consistent with optical depth measurements and a minimal low-redshift contribution, with varying assumptions for this component leading to tighter limits. Finally, we analyze realistic non-Gaussian, correlated microwave sky simulations containing Galactic and extragalactic foreground fields, built independently of the DR6 parametric foreground model. Processing these simulations through the DR6 power spectrum and likelihood pipeline, we recover the input cosmological parameters of the underlying cosmic microwave background field, a new demonstration for small-scale CMB analysis. These tests validate the robustness of the ACT DR6 foreground model and cosmological parameter constraints. 
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    Free, publicly-accessible full text available October 1, 2026
  4. Abstract We present measurements of large-scale cosmic microwave backgroundE-mode polarization from the Cosmology Large Angular Scale Surveyor 90 GHz data. Using 115 det-yr of observations collected through 2024 with a variable-delay polarization modulator, we achieved a polarization sensitivity of 82 μ K arcmin , comparable to Planck at similar frequencies (100 and 143 GHz ). The analysis demonstrates effective mitigation of systematic errors and addresses challenges to large-angular-scale power recovery posed by time-domain filtering in maximum-likelihood map-making. A novel implementation of the pixel-space transfer matrix is introduced, which enables efficient filtering simulations and bias correction in the power spectrum using the quadratic cross-spectrum estimator. Overall, we achieved an unbiased time-domain filtering correction to recover the largest angular scale polarization, with the only power deficit, arising from map-making nonlinearity, being characterized as <3%. Through cross-correlation with Planck, we detected the cosmic reionization at 99.4% significance and measured the reionization optical depth τ = 0.05 3 0.019 + 0.018 , marking the first ground-based attempt at such a measurement. At intermediate angular scales (ℓ > 30), our results, both independently and in cross-correlation with Planck, remain fully consistent with Planck’s measurements. 
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    Free, publicly-accessible full text available June 11, 2026
  5. Abstract The Atacama Cosmology Telescope Data Release 6 (ACT DR6) power spectrum is expected to provide state-of-the-art cosmological constraints, with an associated need for precise error modeling. In this paper we design, and evaluate the performance of, an analytic covariance matrix prescription for the DR6 power spectrum that sufficiently accounts for the complicated ACT map properties. We use recent advances in the literature to handle sharp features in the signal and noise power spectra, and account for the effect of map-level anisotropies on the covariance matrix. In including inhomogeneous survey depth information, the resulting covariance matrix prescription is structurally similar to that used in thePlanckCosmic Microwave Background (CMB) analysis. We quantify the performance of our prescription using comparisons to Monte Carlo simulations, finding better than 3% agreement. This represents an improvement from a simpler, pre-existing prescription, which differs from simulations by ∼ 16%. We develop a new method to correct the analytic covariance matrix using simulations, after which both prescriptions achieve better than 1% agreement. This correction method outperforms a commonly used alternative, where the analytic correlation matrix is assumed to be accurate when correcting the covariance. Beyond its use for ACT, this framework should be applicable for future high resolution CMB experiments including the Simons Observatory (SO). 
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    Free, publicly-accessible full text available May 1, 2026
  6. Zmuidzinas, Jonas; Gao, Jian-Rong (Ed.)
    Front-end polarization modulation enables improved polarization measurement stability by modulating the targeted signal above the low-frequency $1/f$ drifts associated with atmospheric and instrumental instabilities and diminishes the impact of instrumental polarization. In this work, we present the design and characterization of a new 60-cm diameter Reflective Half-Wave Plate (RHWP) polarization modulator for the 90 GHz band telescope of the Cosmology Large Angular Scale Surveyor (CLASS) project. The RHWP consists of an array of parallel wires (diameter 50~µm, 175~µm pitch) positioned 0.88~mm from an aluminum mirror. In lab tests, it was confirmed that the wire resonance frequency ($$f_\mathrm{res}$$) profile is consistent with the target, $139$~Hz$$<154$$~Hz in the optically active region (diameter smaller than 150~mm), preventing the wire vibration during operation and reducing the RHWP deformation under the wire tension. The mirror tilt relative to the rotating axis was controlled to be $<15''$, corresponding to an increase in beam width due to beam smearing of < $0.6''$, %a beam smearing amplitude of $<0.6''$, negligible compared to the beam's full-width half-maximum of $36'$. The median and 16/84th percentile of the wire--mirror separation residual was $$0.048^{+0.013}_{-0.014}$$~mm in the optically active region, achieving a modulation efficiency $$\epsilon=96.2_{+0.5}^{-0.4}\%$$ with an estimated bandpass of 34~GHz. The angular velocity of the RHWP was maintained to an accuracy of within 0.005\% at the nominal rotation frequency (2.5~Hz). The RHWP has been successfully integrated into the CLASS 90 GHz telescope and started taking data in June 2024, replacing the previous modulator that has been in operation since June 2018. 
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  7. We present Weak Gravitational Lensing measurements of a sample of 157 clusters within the Kilo Degree Survey (KiDS), detected with a > 5σthermal Sunyaev-Zel’dovich (SZ) signal by the Atacama Cosmology Telescope (ACT). Using a halo-model approach, we constrained the average total cluster mass,MWL, accounting for the ACT cluster selection function of the full sample. We find that the SZ cluster mass estimateMSZ, which was calibrated using X-ray observations, is biased withMSZ/MWL = (1 − bSZ) = 0.65 ± 0.05. Separating the sample into six mass bins, we find no evidence of a strong mass dependency for the mass bias, (1 − bSZ). Adopting this ACT-KiDS SZ mass calibration would bring thePlanckSZ cluster count into agreement with the counts expected from thePlanckcosmic microwave background ΛCDM cosmological model, although it should be noted that the cluster sample considered in this work has a lower average massMSZ, uncor = 3.64 × 1014 Mcompared to thePlanckcluster sample which has an average mass in the rangeMSZ, uncor = (5.5 − 8.5)×1014 M, depending on the sub-sample used. 
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  8. ABSTRACT We have performed targeted searches of known extragalactic transient events at millimetre wavelengths using nine seasons (2013–2021) of 98, 150, and 229 GHz Atacama Cosmology Telescope (ACT) observations that mapped ∼40 per cent of the sky for most of the data volume. Our data cover 88 gamma-ray bursts (GRBs), 12 tidal disruption events (TDEs), and 203 other transients, including supernovae (SNe). We stack our ACT observations to increase the signal-to-noise ratio of the maps. In all cases but one, we do not detect these transients in the ACT data. The single candidate detection (event AT2019ppm), seen at ∼5σ significance in our data, appears to be due to active galactic nuclei activity in the host galaxy coincident with a transient alert. For each source in our search we provide flux upper limits. For example, the medians for the 95 per cent confidence upper limits at 98 GHz are 15, 18, and 16 mJy for GRBs, SNe, and TDEs, respectively, in the first month after discovery. The projected sensitivity of future wide-area cosmic microwave background surveys should be sufficient to detect many of these events using the methods described in this paper. 
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