3,532 research outputs found
How to make maps from CMB data without losing information
The next generation of CMB experiments can measure cosmological parameters
with unprecedented accuracy - in principle. To achieve this in practice when
faced with such gigantic data sets, elaborate data analysis methods are needed
to make it computationally feasible. An important step in the data pipeline is
to make a map, which typically reduces the size of the data set my orders of
magnitude. We compare ten map-making methods, and find that for the Gaussian
case, both the method used by the COBE DMR team and various variants of Wiener
filtering are optimal in the sense that the map retains all cosmological
information that was present in the time-ordered data (TOD). Specifically, one
obtains just as small error bars on cosmological parameters when estimating
them from the map as one could have obtained by estimating them directly from
the TOD. The method of simply averaging the observations of each pixel (for
total-power detectors), on the contrary, is found to generally destroy
information, as does the maximum entropy method and most other non-linear
map-making techniques.
Since it is also numerically feasible, the COBE method is the natural choice
for large data sets. Other lossless (e.g. Wiener-filtered) maps can then be
computed directly from the COBE method map.Comment: Minor revisions to match published version. 12 pages, with 1 figure
included. Color figure and links at
http://www.sns.ias.edu/~max/mapmaking.html (faster from the US), from
http://www.mpa-garching.mpg.de/~max/mapmaking.html (faster from Europe) or
from [email protected]
Consciousness as a State of Matter
We examine the hypothesis that consciousness can be understood as a state of
matter, "perceptronium", with distinctive information processing abilities. We
explore five basic principles that may distinguish conscious matter from other
physical systems such as solids, liquids and gases: the information,
integration, independence, dynamics and utility principles. If such principles
can identify conscious entities, then they can help solve the quantum
factorization problem: why do conscious observers like us perceive the
particular Hilbert space factorization corresponding to classical space (rather
than Fourier space, say), and more generally, why do we perceive the world
around us as a dynamic hierarchy of objects that are strongly integrated and
relatively independent? Tensor factorization of matrices is found to play a
central role, and our technical results include a theorem about Hamiltonian
separability (defined using Hilbert-Schmidt superoperators) being maximized in
the energy eigenbasis. Our approach generalizes Giulio Tononi's integrated
information framework for neural-network-based consciousness to arbitrary
quantum systems, and we find interesting links to error-correcting codes,
condensed matter criticality, and the Quantum Darwinism program, as well as an
interesting connection between the emergence of consciousness and the emergence
of time.Comment: Replaced to match accepted CSF version; discussion improved, typos
corrected. 36 pages, 15 fig
Doppler peaks and all that: CMB anisotropies and what they can tell us
The power spectrum of fluctuations in the cosmic microwave background (CMB)
depends on most of the key cosmological parameters. Accurate future
measurements of this power spectrum might therefore allow us to determine h,
Omega, Omega_b, Lambda, n, T/S, etc, with hitherto unprecedented accuracy. In
these lecture notes, which are intended to be readable without much prior CMB
knowledge, I review the various physical processes that generate CMB
fluctuations, focusing on how changes in the parameters alters the shape of the
power spectrum. I also discuss foregrounds and real-world data analysis issues
and how these affect the accuracy with which the parameters can be measured.Comment: 40 pages, including 12 figures. Postscript. Latest version available
from http://astro.berkeley.edu/~max/power.html (faster from the US), from
http://www.mpa-garching.mpg.de/~max/power.html (faster from Europe) or from
[email protected]
A method for extracting maximum resolution power spectra from microwave sky maps
A method for extracting maximal resolution power spectra from microwave sky
maps is presented and applied to the 2 year COBE data, yielding a power
spectrum that is consistent with a standard n=1, Q=20 micro-Kelvin model. By
using weight functions that fall off smoothly near the galactic cut, it is
found that the spectral resolution \Delta l can be more than doubled at l=15
and more than tripled at l=20 compared to simply using galaxy-cut spherical
harmonics. For a future high-resolution experiment with reasonable sky
coverage, the resolution around the CDM Doppler peaks would be enhanced by a
factor of about 100, down to \Delta l\approx 1, thus allowing spectral features
such as the locations of the peaks to be determined with great accuracy. The
reason that the improvement is so large is basically that functions with a
sharp edge at the galaxy cut exhibit considerable "ringing" in the Fourier
domain, whereas smooth functions do not. The method presented here is
applicable to any survey geometry, chopping strategy and exposure pattern
whatsoever. The so called signal-to-noise eigenfunction technique is found to
be a special case, corresponding to ignoring the width of the window functions.Comment: 25 pages, including 4 figures. Postscript. Substantially revised,
more than twice original length, matches accepted version. Latest version
available from http://www.sns.ias.edu/~max/window.html (faster from the US),
from http://www.mpa-garching.mpg.de/~max/window.html (faster from Europe) or
from [email protected]
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