Departmental Groups
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Joseph Fowler
I am
an observational cosmologist working on instruments to study
the cosmic microwave background radiation (CMB). The CMB is
the relic radiation remaining from the hot "big bang." It must
be measured through microwave and radio telescopes optimized for
detecting very small (~10-5) departures from a perfectly
isotropic background at 2.7 Kelvin. I am involved in the
millimeter-wavelength
CMB project ACT.
Intense
worldwide study over the last decade, culminating with
WMAP, has revealed most of the information
available in the
primary CMB anisotropies (larger than a few tenths of a degree).
However,
there remains much to be learned from so-called secondary anisotropies,
which were imprinted onto the CMB in the less-early universe.
These include the Sunyaev-Zel'dovich (SZ) effect, in which hot plasma
in galaxy clusters scatters some CMB photons to higher frequencies,
and the Ostriker-Vishniac effect, by which a reionized universe
(after z=1000 but before z=5) produces anisotropy at arcminute scales.
To study these secondary anisotropies, I am part of a new collaboration,
involving Page, Spergel, and Staggs at Princeton plus scientists at several
other institutions. This group is designing the Atacama Cosmology Telescope and
building its cameras. ACT will be deployed in 2007 on Cerro Toco in northern
Chile's Atacama Desert. The microwave receivers will use a new bolometer array
technology, allowing for 1024-pixel imaging cameras in each of three wavelengths
(150, 220, and 270 GHz) surrounding the null of the SZ effect. The ACT project
presents many challenges in cryogenics, optics, and electronics. My interests
have been in the optical design, computer data acquisition, and integrating the
system.
A large fraction of our current work at Princeton is directed to making a
prototype of ACT to operate from the Jadwin Hall roof and later from Chile. The
prototype will involve a 32-element single-color camera and will use the WMAP
prototype as its focusing optics. It will represent the first time that many of
the new detection technologies, including TES bolometers and SQUID multiplexed
readout electronics, have been used together to observe the sky.
My past research interests include the study of cosmic ray
elemental composition at air shower eneregies (1014 eV and
higher). The accepted model of cosmic ray acceleration in
supernovae fails to explain these high energy cosmic rays, and their
origin
is a mystery.
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S e l e c t e d P u b l i c a t i o n s:
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- "CMB Observations with a Compact
Heterogeneous 150 GHz Interferometer in Chile", J. W. Fowler et al.,
Astrophysical Journal Supplements, 156, 1 (2005).
astro-ph/0403137
- "The Composition of Cosmic Rays at the Knee",
S.P. Swordy et al., Astroparticle Phys., 18, 129 (2002).
- "A measurement of the cosmic ray spectrum and composition at the
knee", J.W. Fowler, L.F. Fortson, C.C.H. Jui, D.B. Kieda, R.A. Ong,
C.L. Pryke, P. Sommers, Astroparticle Phys., 15, 49 (2001).
astro-ph/0003190
- "Composition and spectrum of cosmic rays at the knee measured by
the CASA-BLANCA experiment", PhD Thesis, University of Chicago.
(2000) Advisor: René Ong.
- "The cosmic ray composition between 1014 eV and 1016 eV",
M.A.K. Glasmacher et al., Astroparticle Phys., 12, 1 (1999).
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