The damping of a non-uniform magnetic field between the redshifts of about
104 and 106 injects energy into the photon-baryon plasma and causes the
CMB to deviate from a perfect blackbody spectrum, producing a so-called
μ-distortion. We can calculate the correlation ⟨μT⟩ of
this distortion with the temperature anisotropy T of the CMB to search for a
correlation ⟨B2ζ⟩ between the magnetic field B and the
curvature perturbation ζ; knowing the ⟨B2ζ⟩
correlation would help us distinguish between different models of
magnetogenesis. Since the perturbations which produce the μ-distortion will
be much smaller scale than the relevant density perturbations, the observation
of this correlation is sensitive to the squeezed limit of ⟨B2ζ⟩, which is naturally parameterized by bNL (a
parameter defined analogously to fNL). We find that a PIXIE-like
CMB experiments has a signal to noise S/N≈1.0×bNL(B~μ/10 nG)2, where B~μ is the magnetic field's
strength on μ-distortion scales normalized to today's redshift; thus, a 10
nG field would be detectable with bNL=O(1). However, if
the field is of inflationary origin, we generically expect it to be accompanied
by a curvature bispectrum ⟨ζ3⟩ induced by the magnetic
field. For sufficiently small magnetic fields, the signal ⟨B2ζ⟩ will dominate, but for B~μ≳1 nG, one would have
to consider the specifics of the inflationary magnetogenesis model.
We also discuss the potential post-magnetogenesis sources of a ⟨B2ζ⟩ correlation and explain why there will be no contribution from
the evolution of the magnetic field in response to the curvature perturbation.Comment: 23 pages, 1 figure. v2: Noted that a competing effect could
potentially be smaller than originally stated. Fixed references. Matches JCAP
versio