253 research outputs found
KSZ tomography and the bispectrum
Several statistics have been proposed for measuring the kSZ effect by
combining the small-scale CMB with galaxy surveys. We review five such
statistics, and show that they are all mathematically equivalent to the optimal
bispectrum estimator of type . Reinterpreting these kSZ
statistics as special cases of bispectrum estimation makes many aspects
transparent, for example optimally weighting the estimator, or incorporating
photometric redshift errors. We analyze the information content of the
bispectrum and show that there are two observables: the small-scale
galaxy-electron power spectrum , and the large-scale
galaxy-velocity power spectrum . The cosmological constraining power
of the kSZ arises from its sensitivity to fluctuations on large length scales,
where its effective noise level can be much better than galaxy surveys.Comment: 39 page
Survey strategy optimization for the Atacama Cosmology Telescope
In recent years there have been significant improvements in the sensitivity
and the angular resolution of the instruments dedicated to the observation of
the Cosmic Microwave Background (CMB). ACTPol is the first polarization
receiver for the Atacama Cosmology Telescope (ACT) and is observing the CMB sky
with arcmin resolution over about 2000 sq. deg. Its upgrade, Advanced ACTPol
(AdvACT), will observe the CMB in five frequency bands and over a larger area
of the sky. We describe the optimization and implementation of the ACTPol and
AdvACT surveys. The selection of the observed fields is driven mainly by the
science goals, that is, small angular scale CMB measurements, B-mode
measurements and cross-correlation studies. For the ACTPol survey we have
observed patches of the southern galactic sky with low galactic foreground
emissions which were also chosen to maximize the overlap with several galaxy
surveys to allow unique cross-correlation studies. A wider field in the
northern galactic cap ensured significant additional overlap with the BOSS
spectroscopic survey. The exact shapes and footprints of the fields were
optimized to achieve uniform coverage and to obtain cross-linked maps by
observing the fields with different scan directions. We have maximized the
efficiency of the survey by implementing a close to 24 hour observing strategy,
switching between daytime and nighttime observing plans and minimizing the
telescope idle time. We describe the challenges represented by the survey
optimization for the significantly wider area observed by AdvACT, which will
observe roughly half of the low-foreground sky. The survey strategies described
here may prove useful for planning future ground-based CMB surveys, such as the
Simons Observatory and CMB Stage IV surveys.Comment: 14 Pages, 9 Figures, 4 Table
Detection of the pairwise kinematic Sunyaev-Zel'dovich effect with BOSS DR11 and the Atacama Cosmology Telescope
We present a new measurement of the kinematic Sunyaev-Zeldovich effect using
data from the Atacama Cosmology Telescope (ACT) and the Baryon Oscillation
Spectroscopic Survey (BOSS). Using 600 square degrees of overlapping sky area,
we evaluate the mean pairwise baryon momentum associated with the positions of
50,000 bright galaxies in the BOSS DR11 Large Scale Structure catalog. A
non-zero signal arises from the large-scale motions of halos containing the
sample galaxies. The data fits an analytical signal model well, with the
optical depth to microwave photon scattering as a free parameter determining
the overall signal amplitude. We estimate the covariance matrix of the mean
pairwise momentum as a function of galaxy separation, using microwave sky
simulations, jackknife evaluation, and bootstrap estimates. The most
conservative simulation-based errors give signal-to-noise estimates between 3.6
and 4.1 for varying galaxy luminosity cuts. We discuss how the other error
determinations can lead to higher signal-to-noise values, and consider the
impact of several possible systematic errors. Estimates of the optical depth
from the average thermal Sunyaev-Zeldovich signal at the sample galaxy
positions are broadly consistent with those obtained from the mean pairwise
momentum signal.Comment: 15 pages, 8 figures, 2 table
The Atacama Cosmology Telescope: Two-Season ACTPol Lensing Power Spectrum
We report a measurement of the power spectrum of cosmic microwave background
(CMB) lensing from two seasons of Atacama Cosmology Telescope Polarimeter
(ACTPol) CMB data. The CMB lensing power spectrum is extracted from both
temperature and polarization data using quadratic estimators. We obtain results
that are consistent with the expectation from the best-fit Planck LCDM model
over a range of multipoles L=80-2100, with an amplitude of lensing A_lens =
1.06 +/- 0.15 (stat.) +/- 0.06 (sys.) relative to Planck. Our measurement of
the CMB lensing power spectrum gives sigma_8 Omega_m^0.25 = 0.643 +/- 0.054;
including baryon acoustic oscillation scale data, we constrain the amplitude of
density fluctuations to be sigma_8 = 0.831 +/- 0.053. We also update
constraints on the neutrino mass sum. We verify our lensing measurement with a
number of null tests and systematic checks, finding no evidence of significant
systematic errors. This measurement relies on a small fraction of the ACTPol
data already taken; more precise lensing results can therefore be expected from
the full ACTPol dataset.Comment: 17 pages, 11 figures, to be submitted to Physical Review
class_sz I: Overview
class_sz is a versatile and robust code in C and Python that can compute
theoretical predictions for a wide range of observables relevant to
cross-survey science in the Stage IV era. The code is public at
https://github.com/CLASS-SZ/class_sz along with a series of tutorial notebooks
(https://github.com/CLASS-SZ/notebooks). It will be presented in full detail in
paper II. Here we give a brief overview of key features and usage.Comment: to appear in Proc. of the mm Universe 2023 conference, Grenoble
(France), June 2023, published by F. Mayet et al. (Eds), EPJ Web of
conferences, EDP Science
CMB-S4 Science Book, First Edition
This book lays out the scientific goals to be addressed by the
next-generation ground-based cosmic microwave background experiment, CMB-S4,
envisioned to consist of dedicated telescopes at the South Pole, the high
Chilean Atacama plateau and possibly a northern hemisphere site, all equipped
with new superconducting cameras. CMB-S4 will dramatically advance cosmological
studies by crossing critical thresholds in the search for the B-mode
polarization signature of primordial gravitational waves, in the determination
of the number and masses of the neutrinos, in the search for evidence of new
light relics, in constraining the nature of dark energy, and in testing general
relativity on large scales
The Atacama Cosmology Telescope: measuring radio galaxy bias through cross-correlation with lensing
We correlate the positions of radio galaxies in the FIRST survey with the cosmic microwave background lensing convergence estimated from the Atacama Cosmology Telescope over 470 deg2 to determine the bias of these galaxies. We remove optically cross-matched sources
below redshift z = 0.2 to preferentially select active galactic nuclei (AGN). We measure the
angular cross-power spectrum Cκg
l at 4.4σ significance in the multipole range 100 < l < 3000, corresponding to physical scales within ≈2–60 Mpc at an effective redshift zeff = 1.5. Modelling
the AGN population with a redshift-dependent bias, the cross-spectrum is well fitted by the Planck best-fitting � cold dark matter cosmological model. Fixing the cosmology
and assumed redshift distribution of sources, we fit for the overall bias model normalization, finding b(zeff) = 3.5 ± 0.8 for the full galaxy sample and b(zeff) = 4.0 ± 1.1(3.0 ± 1.1) for sources brighter (fainter) than 2.5 mJy. This measurement characterizes the typical halo mass
of radio-loud AGN: we find log(Mhalo/ M) = 13.6+0.3 −0.4
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