Now showing items 1-4 of 4

    • Castellanos, Pablo; Casassus Montero, Simón; Dickinson, Clive; Vidal, Matías; Paladini, Roberta; Cleary, Kieran; Davies, Rodney D.; Davis, Richard J.; White, Glenn J.; Taylor, Angela C. (WILEY-BLACKWELL, 2011-02)
      An anomalous radio continuum component at cm-wavelengths has been observed in various sources, including dark clouds. This continuum component represents a new property of the ISM. In this work we focus on one particular ...
    • Vidal, M.; Casassus Montero, Simón; Dickinson, C.; Witt, A. N.; Castellanos, P.; Davies, R. D.; Davis, R. J.; Cabrera, G.; Cleary, K.; Allison, J. R.; Bond, J. R.; Bronfman Aguiló, Leonardo; Bustos, R.; Jones, M. E.; Paladini, R.; Pearson, T. J.; Readhead, A. C. S.; Reeves, R.; Sievers, J. L.; Taylor, A. C. (2011)
      The diffuse cm wave IR-correlated signal, the ‘anomalous’ CMB foreground, is thought to arise in the dust in cirrus clouds.We present Cosmic Background Imager (CBI) cm wave data of two translucent clouds, ζ Oph and LDN ...
    • Casassus Montero, Simón (European Southern Observatory., 2014-05-20)
      Anomalous microwave emission (AME) is believed to be due to electric dipole radiation from small spinning dust grains. The aim of this paper is a statistical study of the basic properties of AME regions and the environment ...
    • Tibbs, C. T.; Flagey, N.; Paladini, R.; Compiègne, M.; Shenoy, S.; Carey, S.; Noriega Crespo, A.; Dickinson, C.; Ali Haïmoud, Y.; Casassus Montero, Simón; Cleary, K.; Davies, R. D.; Hirata, C. M.; Watson, R. A. (2011)
      Anomalous microwave emission is known to exist in the Perseus cloud. One of the most promising candidates to explain this excess of emission is electric dipole radiation from rapidly rotating very small dust grains, ...