A large-beam sky survey at millimeter and submillimeter wavelengths made from balloon altitudes.
Abstract
A survey has been made of a quarter of the celestial sphere from balloon altitudes with a telescope having a 1.6-deg beamwidth and two spectral bands: 3-10 kaysers and 10-25 kaysers. The limiting sensitivity of the survey was 10,000 Jy. The galactic disk was detected from 358 to 45 deg galactic longitude. The total far-infrared flux from several regions on the galactic plane measured in this survey is 5-10 times larger than that observed by others using smaller beamwidths and small-amplitude spatial chopping, indicating that a substantial part of the emission comes from extended sources. Two other extended sources were also observed, one in the Cygnus region and the other a spur running off the galactic plane at 130 deg galactic longitude toward the north celestial pole. In addition, lower limits for the spectral index of interstellar dust emission are presented.
- Publication:
-
The Astrophysical Journal
- Pub Date:
- August 1979
- DOI:
- 10.1086/157235
- Bibcode:
- 1979ApJ...231..702O
- Keywords:
-
- Balloon-Borne Instruments;
- Far Infrared Radiation;
- Galactic Structure;
- Interstellar Matter;
- Milky Way Galaxy;
- Sky Surveys (Astronomy);
- Angular Distribution;
- Background Radiation;
- Cosmic Rays;
- Data Processing;
- Emission Spectra;
- Galactic Nuclei;
- Millimeter Waves;
- Spatial Distribution;
- Submillimeter Waves;
- Tables (Data);
- Space Radiation;
- Galactic Structure;
- Galaxy:Infrared Radiation;
- Galaxy:MM Radiation;
- Telescopes:Balloon-Borne