Dongwoo Chung
(Cornell University)
TIME is a 200-300 GHz grating analogue spectrometer with a TES focal plane, operating from the Arizona Radio Observatory on Kitt Peak, Arizona. The degree-wide linear field of view, spanned by 16 dual-polarisation feeds with instantaneous spectrometry, makes TIME an excellent pathfinder for mm-wave line-intensity mapping. This talk will provide a general status update on how we continue to meet challenges in instrumentation and analysis, as we target an operations restart in winter 2025-26. The TIME team continues to view the experiment as a key testing ground for techniques to characterise and remove hyperspectral correlated noise and systematics, in a way that will interact closely with other LIM experiments, including some with direct personnel overlap (COMAP, CCAT/EoR-Spec).
Dongwoo Chung
(Cornell University)
Prof.
Abigail Crites
(Cornell University)
Anthony Turner
(Caltech/JPL)
Asantha Cooray
(UC Irvine)
Audrey Dunn
(RIT)
Ben Vaughan
(Cornell University)
Chao-Te Li
(ASIAA)
Clifford Frez
(Caltech/JPL)
Dan Marrone
(University of Arizona)
Dang Pham
(University of Toronto)
Eli Wolochow
(RIT)
Evan Mayer
(University of Arizona)
Fionna Hufford
(RIT)
Ian Lowe
(University of Arizona)
Ibrahim Shehzad
(Cornell University)
Isaac Trumper
(University of Arizona)
Jamie Bock
(Caltech/JPL)
Jason Sun
(Northwestern)
Jonathon Hunacek
(Caltech/JPL)
Kenny Lau
(Caltech/JPL)
Matt Bradford
(Caltech/JPL)
Michael Zemcov
(RIT)
Nick Emerson
(University of Arizona)
Ryan Keenan
(MPIA)
Samantha Berek
(University of Toronto)
Selina Yang
(Cornell University)
Shwetha Prakash
(Cornell University)
Sukhman Singh
(Cornell University)
Tashun Wei
(ASIAA)
Tess Case-Cortez
(RIT)
Tzu-Ching Chang
(Caltech/JPL)
Victoria Butler
(Cornell University)
Yun-Ting Cheng
(Caltech/JPL)