296 research outputs found
Planck constraints on neutrino isocurvature density perturbations
The recent Cosmic Microwave Background data from the Planck satellite
experiment, when combined with HST determinations of the Hubble constant, are
compatible with a larger, non-standard, number of relativistic degrees of
freedom at recombination, parametrized by the neutrino effective number
. In the curvaton scenario, a larger value for could arise
from a non-zero neutrino chemical potential connected to residual neutrino
isocurvature density (NID) perturbations after the decay of the curvaton field,
parametrized by the amplitude . Here we present new constraints
on and from an analysis of recent cosmological data.
We found that the Planck+WP dataset does not show any indication for a neutrino
isocurvature component, severly constraining its amplitude, and that current
indications for a non-standard are further relaxed.Comment: 5 pages, 3 figure
First cosmological constraints combining Planck with the recent gravitational-wave standard siren measurement of the Hubble constant
The recent observations of gravitational-wave and electromagnetic emission
produced by the merger of the binary neutron-star system GW170817 have opened
the possibility of using standard sirens to constrain the value of the Hubble
constant. While the reported bound of at C.L. is
significantly weaker than those recently derived by observations of Cepheid
variables, it does not require any form of cosmic distance ladder and can be
considered as complementary and, in principle, more conservative. Here we
combine, for the first time, the new measurement with the Planck Cosmic
Microwave Background observations in a parameters extended CDM
scenario, where the Hubble constant is weakly constrained from CMB data alone
and bound to a low value km/s/Mpc at C.L. We point
out that the non-Gaussian shape of the GW170817 bound makes lower values of the
Hubble constant in worst agreement with observations than what expected from a
Gaussian form. The inclusion of the new GW170817 Hubble constant measurement
therefore significantly reduces the allowed parameter space, improving the
cosmological bounds on several parameters as the neutrino mass, curvature and
the dark energy equation of state.Comment: 5 pages, 4 Figures, few typos correcte
Can interacting dark energy solve the tension?
The answer is Yes! We indeed find that interacting dark energy can alleviate
the current tension on the value of the Hubble constant between the
Cosmic Microwave Background anisotropies constraints obtained from the Planck
satellite and the recent direct measurements reported by Riess et al. 2016. The
combination of these two datasets points towards an evidence for a non-zero
dark matter-dark energy coupling at more than two standard deviations,
with at CL. However the tension is
better solved when the equation of state of the interacting dark energy
component is allowed to freely vary, with a phantom-like equation of state
(at CL), ruling out the pure cosmological constant
case, , again at more than two standard deviations. When Planck data are
combined with external datasets, as BAO, JLA Supernovae Ia luminosity
distances, cosmic shear or lensing data, we find good consistency with the
cosmological constant scenario and no compelling evidence for a dark
matter-dark energy coupling.Comment: 10 pages, 6 figure
Reconciling Planck with the local value of in extended parameter space
The recent determination of the local value of the Hubble constant by Riess
et al, 2016 (hereafter R16) is now 3.3 sigma higher than the value derived from
the most recent CMB anisotropy data provided by the Planck satellite in a LCDM
model. Here we perform a combined analysis of the Planck and R16 results in an
extended parameter space, varying simultaneously 12 cosmological parameters
instead of the usual 6. We find that a phantom-like dark energy component, with
effective equation of state at 68 % c.l. can solve
the current tension between the Planck dataset and the R16 prior in an extended
CDM scenario. On the other hand, the neutrino effective number is
fully compatible with standard expectations. This result is confirmed when
including cosmic shear data from the CFHTLenS survey and CMB lensing
constraints from Planck. However, when BAO measurements are included we find
that some of the tension with R16 remains, as also is the case when we include
the supernova type Ia luminosity distances from the JLA catalog.Comment: 6 pages, 1 figur
Cosmological Hints of Modified Gravity ?
The recent measurements of Cosmic Microwave Background temperature and
polarization anisotropies made by the Planck satellite have provided impressive
confirmation of the CDM cosmological model. However interesting hints
of slight deviations from CDM have been found, including a
c.l. preference for a "modified gravity" structure formation scenario. In this
paper we confirm the preference for a modified gravity scenario from Planck
2015 data, find that modified gravity solves the so-called anomaly
in the CMB angular spectrum, and constrains the amplitude of matter density
fluctuations to , in better agreement with
weak lensing constraints. Moreover, we find a lower value for the reionization
optical depth of (to be compared with the value of obtained in the standard scenario), more consistent with
recent optical and UV data. We check the stability of this result by
considering possible degeneracies with other parameters, including the neutrino
effective number, the running of the spectral index and the amount of
primordial helium. The indication for modified gravity is still present at
about c.l., and could become more significant if lower values of
were to be further confirmed by future cosmological and astrophysical data.Comment: 10 pages, 5 figures. Minor revisions, accepted for publication on PR
Neutrino Anisotropies after Planck
We present new constraints on the rest-frame sound speed, c_{eff}^2, and the
viscosity parameter, c_{vis}^2, of the Cosmic Neutrino Background from the
recent measurements of the Cosmic Microwave Background anisotropies provided by
the Planck satellite. While broadly consistent with the expectations of
c_{eff}^2=c_{vis}^2=1/3 in the standard scenario, the Planck dataset hints at a
higher value of the viscosity parameter, with c_{vis}^2=0.60+/-0.18 at 68%
c.l., and a lower value of the sound speed, with c_{eff}^2=0.304+/-0.013 at 68%
c.l.. We find a correlation between the neutrino parameters and the lensing
amplitude of the temperature power spectrum A_L. When the latter parameter is
allowed to vary, we find a better consistency with the standard model with
c_{vis}^2=0.51+/-0.22, c_{eff}^2=0.311+/-0.019 and A_L=1.08+/-0.18 at 68% c.l..
This result indicates that the anomalous large value of A_L measured by Planck
could be connected to non-standard neutrino properties. Including additional
datasets from Baryon Acoustic Oscillation surveys and the Hubble Space
Telescope constraint on the Hubble constant, we obtain c_{vis}^2=0.40+/-0.19,
c_{eff}^2=0.319+/-0.019, and A_{L}=1.15+/-0.17 at 68% c.l.; including the
lensing power spectrum, we obtain c_{vis}^2=0.50+/-0.19,
c_{eff}^2=0.314+/-0.015, and A_L=1.025+/-0.076 at 68% c.l.. Finally, we
investigate further degeneracies between the clustering parameters and other
cosmological parameters.Comment: 10 pages, 8 captioned figures, 3 table
A Vacuum Phase Transition Solves Tension
Taking the Planck cosmic microwave background data and the more direct Hubble
constant measurement data as unaffected by systematic offsets, the values of
the Hubble constant interpreted within the CDM cosmological
constant and cold dark matter cosmological model are in
tension. We show that the Parker vacuum metamorphosis model, physically
motivated by quantum gravitational effects and with the same number of
parameters as CDM, can remove the tension, and can give an
improved fit to data (up to ). It also ameliorates tensions
with weak lensing data and the high redshift Lyman alpha forest data. We
separately consider a scale dependent scaling of the gravitational lensing
amplitude, such as provided by modified gravity, neutrino mass, or cold dark
energy, motivated by the somewhat different cosmological parameter estimates
for low and high CMB multipoles. We find that no such scale dependence is
preferred.Comment: 13 pages, 5 figure
Dark Radiation after Planck
We present new constraints on the relativistic neutrino effective number
N_eff and on the Cosmic Microwave Background power spectrum lensing amplitude
A_L from the recent Planck 2013 data release. Including observations of the CMB
large angular scale polarization from the WMAP satellite, we obtain the bounds
N_eff = 3.71 +/- 0.40 and A_L = 1.25 +/- 0.13 at 68% c.l.. The Planck dataset
alone is therefore suggesting the presence of a dark radiation component at
91.1% c.l. and hinting for a higher power spectrum lensing amplitude at 94.3%
c.l.. We discuss the agreement of these results with the previous constraints
obtained from the Atacama Cosmology Telescope (ACT) and the South Pole
Telescope (SPT). Considering the constraints on the cosmological parameters, we
found a very good agreement with the previous WMAP+SPT analysis but a tension
with the WMAP+ACT results, with the only exception of the lensing amplitude.Comment: 5 pages, 6 figures, 2 table
Cornering the Planck tension with future CMB data
The precise measurements of Cosmic Microwave Background Anisotropy angular
power spectra made by the Planck satellite show an anomalous value for the
lensing amplitude, defined by the parameter , at more than
standard deviations. In this paper, after discussing the current status of the
anomaly, we quantify the potential of future CMB measurements in
confirming/falsifying the tension. We find that a space-based
experiment as LiteBIRD could falsify the current tension at the
level of standard deviations. Similar constraints can be achieved by a
Stage-III experiment assuming an external prior on the reionization optical
depth of as already provided by the Planck satellite. A
Stage-IV experiment could further test the tension at the level of
standard deviations. A comparison between temperature and polarization
measurements made at different frequencies could further identify possible
systematics responsible for . We show that, in the case of the
CMB-S4 experiment, polarization data alone will have the potential of
falsifying the current anomaly at more than five standard deviation
and to strongly bound its frequency dependence. We also evaluate the future
constraints on a possible scale dependence for .Comment: 5 pages, 4 figure
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