5,017 research outputs found
Power Spectrum Estimators For Large CMB Datasets
Forthcoming high-resolution observations of the Cosmic Microwave Background
(CMB) radiation will generate datasets many orders of magnitude larger than
have been obtained to date. The size and complexity of such datasets presents a
very serious challenge to analysing them with existing or anticipated
computers. Here we present an investigation of the currently favored algorithm
for obtaining the power spectrum from a sky-temperature map --- the quadratic
estimator. We show that, whilst improving on direct evaluation of the
likelihood function, current implementations still inherently scale as the
equivalent of the cube of the number of pixels or worse, and demonstrate the
critical importance of choosing the right implementation for a particular
dataset.Comment: 8 pages LATEX, no figures, corrected misaligned columns in table
Measuring Planck beams with planets
Aims. Accurate measurement of the cosmic microwave background (CMB) anisotropy requires precise knowledge of the instrument beam. We explore how well the Planck beams will be determined from observations of planets, developing techniques that are also appropriate for other experiments.
Methods. We simulate planet observations with a Planck-like scanning strategy, telescope beams, noise, and detector properties. Then we employ both parametric and non-parametric techniques, reconstructing beams directly from the time-ordered data. With a faithful parameterization of the beam shape, we can constrain certain detector properties, such as the time constants of the detectors, to high precision. Alternatively, we decompose the beam using an orthogonal basis. For both techniques, we characterize the errors in the beam reconstruction with Monte Carlo realizations. For a simplified scanning strategy, we study the impact on estimation of the CMB power spectrum. Finally, we explore the consequences for measuring cosmological parameters, focusing on the spectral index of primordial scalar perturbations, n_s.
Results. The quality of the power spectrum measurement will be significantly influenced by the optical modeling of the telescope. In our most conservative case, using no information about the optics except the measurement of planets, we find that a single transit of Jupiter across the focal plane will measure the beam window functions to better than 0.3% for the channels at 100–217 GHz that are the most sensitive to the CMB. Constraining the beam with optical modeling can lead to much higher quality reconstruction.
Conclusions. Depending on the optical modeling, the beam errors may be a significant contribution to the measurement systematics for n_s
Markov Chain Beam Randomization: a study of the impact of PLANCK beam measurement errors on cosmological parameter estimation
We introduce a new method to propagate uncertainties in the beam shapes used
to measure the cosmic microwave background to cosmological parameters
determined from those measurements. The method, which we call Markov Chain Beam
Randomization, MCBR, randomly samples from a set of templates or functions that
describe the beam uncertainties. The method is much faster than direct
numerical integration over systematic `nuisance' parameters, and is not
restricted to simple, idealized cases as is analytic marginalization. It does
not assume the data are normally distributed, and does not require Gaussian
priors on the specific systematic uncertainties. We show that MCBR properly
accounts for and provides the marginalized errors of the parameters. The method
can be generalized and used to propagate any systematic uncertainties for which
a set of templates is available. We apply the method to the Planck satellite,
and consider future experiments. Beam measurement errors should have a small
effect on cosmological parameters as long as the beam fitting is performed
after removal of 1/f noise.Comment: 17 pages, 23 figures, revised version with improved explanation of
the MCBR and overall wording. Accepted for publication in Astronomy and
Astrophysics (to appear in the Planck pre-launch special issue
Can one reconstruct masked CMB sky?
The CMB maps obtained by observations always possess domains which have to be
masked due to severe uncertainties with respect to the genuine CMB signal.
Cosmological analyses ideally use full CMB maps in order to get e.g. the
angular power spectrum. There are attempts to reconstruct the masked regions at
least at low resolutions, i.e. at large angular scales, before a further
analysis follows. In this paper, the quality of the reconstruction is
investigated for the ILC (7yr) map as well as for 1000 CMB simulations of the
LambdaCDM concordance model. The latter allows an error estimation for the
reconstruction algorithm which reveals some drawbacks. The analysis points to
errors of the order of a significant fraction of the mean temperature
fluctuation of the CMB. The temperature 2-point correlation function C(theta)
is evaluated for different reconstructed sky maps which leads to the conclusion
that it is safest to compute it on the cut-sky
Evidence of vorticity and shear at large angular scales in the WMAP data: a violation of cosmological isotropy?
Motivated by the large-scale asymmetry observed in the cosmic microwave
background sky, we consider a specific class of anisotropic cosmological models
-- Bianchi type VII_h -- and compare them to the WMAP first-year data on large
angular scales. Remarkably, we find evidence of a correlation which is ruled
out as a chance alignment at the 3sigma level. The best fit Bianchi model
corresponds to x=0.55, Omega_0=0.5, a rotation axis in the direction
(l,b)=(222degr,-62degr), shear (sigma/H)_0=2.4e-10 and a right--handed
vorticity (omega/H)_0=6.1e-10. Correcting for this component greatly reduces
the significance of the large-scale power asymmetry, resolves several anomalies
detected on large angular scales (ie. the low quadrupole amplitude and
quadrupole/octopole planarity and alignment), and can account for a
non--Gaussian "cold spot" on the sky. Despite the apparent inconsistency with
the best-fit parameters required in inflationary models to account for the
acoustic peaks, we consider the results sufficiently provocative to merit
further consideration.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figures; emulateapj.cls; ApJL accepted version plus fixed
error in vorticity calculation (sqrt(2) off in Table 1, abstract, and
conclusions); basic conclusions unchange
Testing the Gaussianity of the COBE-DMR data with spherical wavelets
We investigate the Gaussianity of the 4-year COBE-DMR data (in HEALPix
pixelisation) using an analysis based on spherical Haar wavelets. We use all
the pixels lying outside the Galactic cut and compute the skewness, kurtosis
and scale-scale correlation spectra for the wavelet coefficients at each scale.
We also take into account the sensitivity of the method to the orientation of
the input signal. We find a detection of non-Gaussianity at per cent
level in just one of our statistics. Taking into account the total number of
statistics computed, we estimate that the probability of obtaining such a
detection by chance for an underlying Gaussian field is 0.69. Therefore, we
conclude that the spherical wavelet technique shows no strong evidence of
non-Gaussianity in the COBE-DMR data.Comment: latex file 7 pages, 6 figures, submitted to MNRA
Fast Pixel Space Convolution for CMB Surveys with Asymmetric Beams and Complex Scan Strategies: FEBeCoP
Precise measurement of the angular power spectrum of the Cosmic Microwave
Background (CMB) temperature and polarization anisotropy can tightly constrain
many cosmological models and parameters. However, accurate measurements can
only be realized in practice provided all major systematic effects have been
taken into account. Beam asymmetry, coupled with the scan strategy, is a major
source of systematic error in scanning CMB experiments such as Planck, the
focus of our current interest. We envision Monte Carlo methods to rigorously
study and account for the systematic effect of beams in CMB analysis. Toward
that goal, we have developed a fast pixel space convolution method that can
simulate sky maps observed by a scanning instrument, taking into account real
beam shapes and scan strategy. The essence is to pre-compute the "effective
beams" using a computer code, "Fast Effective Beam Convolution in Pixel space"
(FEBeCoP), that we have developed for the Planck mission. The code computes
effective beams given the focal plane beam characteristics of the Planck
instrument and the full history of actual satellite pointing, and performs very
fast convolution of sky signals using the effective beams. In this paper, we
describe the algorithm and the computational scheme that has been implemented.
We also outline a few applications of the effective beams in the precision
analysis of Planck data, for characterizing the CMB anisotropy and for
detecting and measuring properties of point sources.Comment: 26 pages, 15 figures. New subsection on beam/PSF statistics, new and
better figures, more explicit algebra for polarized beams, added explanatory
text at many places following referees comments [Accepted for publication in
ApJS
A determination of the Spectra of Galactic components observed by WMAP
WMAP data when combined with ancillary data on free-free, synchrotron and
dust allow an improved understanding of the spectrum of emission from each of
these components. Here we examine the sky variation at intermediate latitudes
using a cross-correlation technique. In particular, we compare the observed
emission in 15 selected sky regions to three ``standard'' templates.
The free-free emission of the diffuse ionised gas is fitted by a well-known
spectrum at K and Ka band, but the derived emissivity corresponds to a mean
electron temperature of ~4000-5000K. This is inconsistent with estimates from
galactic HII regions. The origin of the discrepancy is unclear.
The anomalous emission associated with dust is clearly detected in most of
the 15 fields studied; it correlates well with the Finkbeiner et al. model 8
predictions (FDS8) at 94 GHz, with an effective spectral index between 20 and
60GHz of -2.85. Furthermore, the emissivity varies by a factor of ~2 from cloud
to cloud. A modestly improved fit to the anomalous dust at K-band is provided
by modulating the template by an estimate of the dust colour temperature,
specifically FDS8*T^n. We find a preferred value n~1.6.
The synchrotron emission steepens between GHz frequencies and the WMAP bands.
There are indications of spectral index variations across the sky but the
current data are not precise enough to accurately quantify this from region to
region. Our analysis of the WMAP data indicates strongly that the
dust-correlated emission at the low WMAP frequencies has a spectrum which is
compatible with spinning dust; we find no evidence for a synchrotron component
correlated with dust (abridged).Comment: 18 pages, 6 figures, revised version uses cross-correlation method
rather than T-T method. Paper re-organised and sent back to refere
Angular Power Spectrum of the Microwave Background Anisotropy seen by the COBE Differential Microwave Radiometer
The angular power spectrum estimator developed by Peebles (1973) and Hauser &
Peebles (1973) has been modified and applied to the 4 year maps produced by the
COBE DMR. The power spectrum of the observed sky has been compared to the power
spectra of a large number of simulated random skies produced with noise equal
to the observed noise and primordial density fluctuation power spectra of power
law form, with . The best fitting value of the spectral index
in the range of spatial scales corresponding to spherical harmonic indices is an apparent spectral index = 1.13 (+0.3)
(-0.4) which is consistent with the Harrison-Zel'dovich primordial spectral
index The best fitting amplitude for is = 18 uK.Comment: 17 pages including 3 PostScript figures. Submitted to The
Astrophysical Journal (Letters
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