539 research outputs found
Lensing effect on polarization in microwave background: extracting convergence power spectrum
Matter inhomogeneities along the line of sight deflect the cosmic microwave
background (CMB) photons originating at the last scattering surface at redshift
. These distortions modify the pattern of CMB polarization. We
identify specific combinations of Stokes and parameters that correspond
to spin 0, variables and can be used to reconstruct the projected matter
density. We compute the expected signal to noise as a function of detector
sensitivity and angular resolution. With Planck satellite the detection would
be at a few level. Several times better detector sensitivity would be
needed to measure the projected dark matter power spectrum over a wider range
of scales, which could provide an independent confirmation of the projected
matter power spectrum as measured from other methods.Comment: 17 pages, 5 figures, accepted for publication in PR
Lensing of the CMB: Non Gaussian aspects
We study the generation of CMB anisotropies by gravitational lensing on small
angular scales. We show these fluctuations are not Gaussian. We prove that the
power spectrum of the tail of the CMB anisotropies on small angular scales
directly gives the power spectrum of the deflection angle. We show that the
generated power on small scales is correlated with the large scale gradient.
The cross correlation between large scale gradient and small scale power can be
used to test the hypothesis that the extra power is indeed generated by
lensing. We compute the three and four point function of the temperature in the
small angle limit. We relate the non-Gaussian aspects presented in this paper
as well as those in our previous studies of the lensing effects on large scales
to the three and four point functions. We interpret the statistics proposed in
terms of different configurations of the four point function and show how they
relate to the statistic that maximizes the S/N.Comment: Changes to match accepted version in PRD, 20 pages 10 figures. Better
resolution images of the figures can be found at
http://www.sns.ias.edu/~matiasz/RESEARCH/cmblensing.htm
Lensing Induced Cluster Signatures in Cosmic Microwave Background
We show that clusters of galaxies induce step-like wiggles on top of the
cosmic microwave background (CMB). The direction of the wiggle is parallel to
the large scale gradient of CMB allowing one to isolate the effect from other
small scale fluctuations. The effect is sensitive to the deflection angle
rather than its derivative (shear or magnification) and is thus tracing outer
parts of the cluster with higher sensitivity than some other methods. A typical
amplitude of the effect is where
is the velocity dispersion of the cluster and several
signals extend out to a fraction of a degree. We derive the expressions for the
temperature profile for several simple parameterized cluster models and
identify some degeneracies between parameters. Finally, we discuss how to
separate this signal from other imprints on CMB using custom designed filters.
Detection of this effect is within reach of the next generation of small scale
CMB telescopes and could provide information about the cluster density profile
beyond the virial radius.Comment: 10 pages, 3 figures, submitted to Ap
Direct Signature of Evolving Gravitational Potential from Cosmic Microwave Background
We show that time dependent gravitational potential can be directly detected
from the cosmic microwave background (CMB) anisotropies. The signature can be
measured by cross-correlating the CMB with the projected density field
reconstructed from the weak lensing distortions of the CMB itself. The
cross-correlation gives a signal whenever there is a time dependent
gravitational potential. This method traces dark matter directly and has a well
defined redshift distribution of the window projecting over the density
perturbations, thereby avoiding the problems plaguing other proposed
cross-correlations. We show that both MAP and Planck will be able to probe this
effect for observationally relevant curvature and cosmological constant models,
which will provide additional constraints on the cosmological parameters.Comment: 4 pages, 2 figures. Submitted to PR
Signature of Gravity Waves in Polarization of the Microwave Background
Using spin-weighted decomposition of polarization in the Cosmic Microwave
Background (CMB) we show that a particular combination of Stokes and
parameters vanishes for primordial fluctuations generated by scalar modes, but
does not for those generated by primordial gravity waves. Because of this
gravity wave detection is not limited by cosmic variance as in the case of
temperature fluctuations. We present the exact expressions for various
polarization power spectra, which are valid on any scale. Numerical evaluation
in inflation-based models shows that the expected signal is of the order of 0.5
, which could be directly tested in future CMB experiments.Comment: 4 pages, 1 figure, RevTeX, matches the accepted version (to appear in
Phys. Rev. Lett.); code available at
http://arcturus.mit.edu:80/~matiasz/CMBFAST/cmbfast.htm
Probing the Statistics of the Temperature-Density Relation of the IGM
Gravitational instability induces a simple correlation between the large and
small scale fluctuations of the Ly-alpha flux spectrum. However,
non-gravitational processes involved in structure formation and evolution will
alter such a correlation. In this paper we explore how scatter in the
temperature-density relation of the IGM reduces the gravitationally induced
scale-scale correlation. By examining whether or not observations of the
correlation are close to that predicted by pure gravity, this puts constraints
on the scatter in the temperature-density relation and in turn on any physical
process which would lead to scatter, e.g. strong fluctuations in the UV
background or radiative transfer effects. By applying this method to high
resolution Keck spectra of Q 1422+231 and HS 1946+7658, we find the predicted
correlation signal induced by gravity, and the diminishing of this correlation
signal at small scales. This suggests extra physics affects the small-scale
structure of the forest, and we can constrain the scatter in the
temperature-density relation to a conservative 20% upper limit. A crude model
suggests, if there is any spatial correlation of temperature, the coherence
length scale must be smaller than ~ 0.3/h Mpc to be consistent with the Keck
data.Comment: 4 pages, 2 figures. Minor revisions, accepted by ApJ Letter
A Polarization Pursuers' Guide
We calculate the detectability of the polarization of the cosmic microwave
background (CMB) as a function of the sky coverage, angular resolution, and
instrumental sensitivity for a hypothetical experiment. We consider the
gradient component of the polarization from density perturbations (scalar
modes) and the curl component from gravitational waves (tensor modes). We show
that the amplitude (and thus the detectability) of the polarization from
density perturbations is roughly the same in any model as long as the model
fits the big-bang-nucleosynthesis (BBN) baryon density and degree-scale
anisotropy measurements. The degree-scale polarization is smaller (and
accordingly more difficult to detect) if the baryon density is higher. In some
cases, the signal-to-noise for polarization (both from scalar and tensor modes)
may be improved in a fixed-time experiment with a smaller survey area.Comment: 18 pages, 6 figure
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