Abstract

The second flight of the Medium-Scale Anisotropy Measurement (MSAM1-94) observed the same field as the first flight (MSAM1-92) to confirm our earlier measurement of cosmic microwave background radiation (CMBR) anisotropy. This instrument chops a 30' beam in a three-position pattern with a throw of ±40' and simultaneously measures single- and double-differenced sky signals. We observe in four spectral channels centered at 5.6, 9.0, 16.5, and 22.5 cm-1, providing sensitivity to the peak of the CMBR and to thermal emission from interstellar dust. The dust component correlates well with the IRAS 100 μm map. The CMBR observations in our double-difference channel correlate well with the earlier observations, but the single-difference channel shows some discrepancies. We obtain a detection of fluctuations in the MSAM1-94 data set that match CMBR in our spectral bands of ΔT/T = 1.9−0.7+1.3 × 10−5 (90% confidence interval, including calibration uncertainty) for total rms Gaussian fluctuations with correlation angle 03, using the double-difference demodulation.

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