66 research outputs found

    On Determining the Spectrum of Primordial Inhomogeneity from the COBE DMR Sky Maps: I. Method

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    The natural approach to a spectral analysis of data distributed on the sky employs spherical harmonic decomposition. A common problem encountered in practical astronomy is the lack of full sky coverage in the available data. For example, the removal of the galactic plane data from the COBE DMR sky maps compromises Fourier analysis of the cosmic microwave background (CMB) temperature distribution due to the loss of orthogonality of the spherical harmonics. An explicit method for constructing orthonormal functions on an incomplete (e.g. Galaxy-cut) sphere is presented. These functions should be used in the proper Fourier analysis of the COBE DMR sky maps to provide the correct input for the determination of the spectrum of primordial inhomogeneity. The results of such an analysis are presented in an accompanying Letter. A similar algebraic construction of appropriate functions can be devised for other astronomical applications.Comment: 11 pages, no figures, uuencoded Postscript file. Submitted to ApJ Letters, COBE Preprint #94-0

    Where is the COBE maps' non-Gaussianity?

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    We review our recent claim that there is evidence of non-Gaussianity in the 4 Year COBE DMR data. We present some new results concerning the effect of the galactic cut upon the non-Gaussian signal. These findings imply a localization of the non-Gaussian signal on the Northern galactic hemisphere.Comment: Proceedings of COSMO98 Asiloma

    Minkowski Functionals used in the Morphological Analysis of Cosmic Microwave Background Anisotropy Maps

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    We present a novel approach to quantifying the morphology of Cosmic Microwave Background (CMB) anisotropy maps. As morphological descriptors, we use shape parameters known as Minkowski functionals. Using the mathematical framework provided by the theory of integral geometry on arbitrary curved supports, we point out the differences to their characterization and interpretation in the case of flat space. With restrictions of real data -- such as pixelization and incomplete sky coverage, to mention just a few -- in mind, we derive and test unbiased estimators for all Minkowski functionals. Various examples, among them the analysis of the four-year COBE DMR data, illustrate the application of our method.Comment: 14 pages, 13 figures, most of which look better in color. Uses AMSTeX, epsf.sty, mncite.sty. Very minor changes to match version accepted for publication in MNRA

    Gabor Transforms on the Sphere with Applications to CMB Power Spectrum Estimation

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    The Fourier transform of a dataset apodised with a window function is known as the Gabor transform. In this paper we extend the Gabor transform formalism to the sphere with the intention of applying it to CMB data analysis. The Gabor coefficients on the sphere known as the pseudo power spectrum is studied for windows of different size. By assuming that the pseudo power spectrum coefficients are Gaussian distributed, we formulate a likelihood ansatz using these as input parameters to estimate the full sky power spectrum from a patch on the sky. Since this likelihood can be calculated quickly without having to invert huge matrices, this allows for fast power spectrum estimation. By using the pseudo power spectrum from several patches on the sky together, the full sky power spectrum can be estimated from full-sky or nearly full-sky observations.Comment: 37 pages, 31 figures, accepted for publication in MNRA

    COBE-DMR-Normalized Dark Energy Cosmogony

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    Likelihood analyses of the COBE-DMR sky maps are used to determine the normalization of the inverse-power-law-potential scalar field dark energy model. Predictions of the DMR-normalized model are compared to various observations to constrain the allowed range of model parameters. Although the derived constraints are restrictive, evolving dark energy density scalar field models remain an observationally-viable alternative to the constant cosmological constant model.Comment: 26 pages, 10 figures, ApJ accepte
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