We investigate the imprint of nonlinear matter condensations on the Cosmic
Microwave Background (CMB) in an Ω=1, Cold Dark Matter (CDM) model
universe. Temperature anisotropies are obtained by numerically evolving matter
inhomogeneities and CMB photons from the beginning of decoupling until the
present epoch. The underlying density field produced by the inhomogeneities is
followed from the linear, through the weakly clustered, into the fully
nonlinear regime. We concentrate on CMB temperature distortions arising from
variations in the gravitational potentials of nonlinear structures. We find two
sources of temperature fluctuations produced by time-varying potentials: (1)
anisotropies due to intrinsic changes in the gravitational potentials of the
inhomogeneities and (2) anisotropies generated by the peculiar, bulk motion of
the structures across the microwave sky. Both effects generate CMB anisotropies
in the range of 10^{-7} \siml \Delta T/T \siml 10^{-6} on scales of ∼1∘. For isolated structures, anisotropies due to proper motion exhibit
a dipole-like signature in the CMB sky that in principle could yield
information on the transverse velocity of the structures.Comment: 9 pages, 7 figures (included), uuencoded postcript fil