Abstract

We present a cross-correlation analysis between 11' resolution total intensity and polarization observations from the Atacama Cosmology Telescope (ACT) at 150 and 220 GHz and 15'' mid-infrared photometry from the Wide-field Infrared Survey Explorer (WISE) over 107 12.5×^\circ\times12.5^\circ patches of sky. We detect a spatially isotropic signal in the WISE×\timesACT TTTT cross power spectrum at 30σ\sigma significance that we interpret as the correlation between the cosmic infrared background at ACT frequencies and polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbon (PAH) emission from galaxies in WISE, i.e., the cosmic PAH background. Within the Milky Way, the Galactic dust TTTT spectra are generally well-described by power laws in \ell over the range 103<<^3 < \ell < 104^4, but there is evidence both for variability in the power law index and for non-power law behavior in some regions. We measure a positive correlation between WISE total intensity and ACT EE-mode polarization at 1000< < \ell \lesssim 6000 at >>3σ\sigma in each of 35 distinct \sim100 deg2^2 regions of the sky, suggesting alignment between Galactic density structures and the local magnetic field persists to sub-parsec physical scales in these regions. The distribution of TETE amplitudes in this \ell range across all 107 regions is biased to positive values, while there is no evidence for such a bias in the TBTB spectra. This work constitutes the highest-\ell measurements of the Galactic dust TETE spectrum to date and indicates that cross-correlation with high-resolution mid-infrared measurements of dust emission is a promising tool for constraining the spatial statistics of dust emission at millimeter wavelengths.Comment: 20 pages, 14 figures, submitted to Ap

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