3,070 research outputs found
Point sources in the MAP sky maps
We discuss point sources foregrounds for the MAP experiment. We consider
several possible strategies for removing them and we assess how the statistics
of the CMB signal are affected by the residual sources. Assuming a power law
distribution for the point sources, we propose a method aimed to determine the
slope of the distribution from the analysis of the moments of the observed
maps. The same method allows for a determination of the underlying CMB
variance. We conclude that the best strategy for point sources finding is the
simultaneous thresholding of the filtered map at all frequencies, with a
relatively low threshold. With this strategy, we expect to find 70 (95)% of the
sources above 3 (4) . Assuming the most conservative case for point
sources detection, the recovered slope of the point sources distribution is
, for a fiducial value. The recovered CMB pus noise map
variance is within 0.2% from the real one, with a standard deviation of , while Cosmic variance contributes 2.2% to the same CMB plus noise map.Comment: 21 pages, 8 figures. Submitted to Ap
Early Universe models from Noncommutative Geometry
We investigate cosmological predictions on the early universe based on the
noncommutative geometry models of gravity coupled to matter. Using the
renormalization group analysis for the Standard Model with right handed
neutrinos and Majorana mass terms, which is the particle physics content of the
most recent noncommutative geometry models, we analyze the behavior of the
coefficients of the gravitational and cosmological terms in the Lagrangian
derived from the asymptotic expansion of the spectral action functional of
noncommutative geometry. We find emergent Hoyle-Narlikar and conformal gravity
at the see-saw scales and a running effective gravitational constant, which
affects the propagation of gravitational waves and the evaporation law of
primordial black holes and provides Linde models of negative gravity in the
early universe. The same renormalization group analysis also governs the
running of the effective cosmological constant of the model. The model also
provides a Higgs based slow-roll inflationary mechanism, for which one can
explicitly compute the slow-roll parameters. The particle physics content
allows for dark matter models based on sterile neutrinos with Majorana mass
terms.Comment: 49 pages, LaTeX, 26 pdf figure
Accretion flows in early-type galaxies and CMB experiments
We investigate the possible contribution from the emission of accretion flows
around supermassive black holes in early type galaxies to current measurements
of the Cosmic Microwave Background (CMB) at radio frequencies. We consider a
range of luminosities suggested by targeted radio observations and accretion
models and compute the residual contribution of these sources to the spectrum
and bispectrum of the observed CMB maps. As for high-resolution CMB
experiments, we find that the unresolved component of these sources could make
up to ~40-50% of the observed CBI and BIMA power spectrum at l > 2000. As a
consequence, the inferred sigma_8^{SZ} value could be biased high by up to
6-7%. As for all sky experiments, we find that the contribution of
accretion-flow sources to the WMAP bispectrum is at the 2-3 per cent level at
most. At the flux limit that Planck will achieve, however, these sources may
contribute up to 15 per cent of the bispectrum in the 60-100 GHz frequency
range. Moreover, Planck should detect hundreds of these sources in the 30-300
GHz frequency window. These detections, possibly coupled with galaxy type
confirmation from optical surveys, will allow number counts to put tighter
constraints on early-type galaxies radio luminosity and accretion flows
properties. These sources may also contribute up to the 30 per cent level to
the residual radio sources power spectrum in future high-resolution SZ surveys
(like ACT or APEX) reaching mJy flux limits.Comment: 7 pages, 3 figures, accepted to MNRA
Background radiation from sterile neutrino decay and reionization
Sterile neutrinos are one of the most promising Warm Dark Matter candidates.
By considering their radiative- and pion-decay channels, we derive the allowed
contribution of sterile neutrinos to the X-ray, optical and near-infrared
cosmic backgrounds. The X-ray background puts a strong constraint on the mass
of radiatively decaying neutrinos (m <= 14 keV), whereas the allowed mass range
for pion-decay neutrinos (for a particle lifetime > 4 X 10^17 s) is 150 <=
m/MeV <= 500. Taking into account these constraints, we find that sterile
neutrinos do not significantly contribute to the optical and near-infrared
background. We further consider the impact of sterile neutrinos on
reionization. We find that the Thomson optical depth due to sterile neutrinos
is tau_e = (0.4-3) X 10^-2 in the case of radiative decays, and it is ~10^-3
for the pion-decay channel. We conclude that these particles must have played
only a minor role in cosmic reionization history.Comment: 13 pages, 9 figures, replaced with revised version, accepted for
publication in MNRA
- âŠ