scholarly journals Planck 2013 Cosmology Results: a Review

2014 ◽  
Vol 1 (1) ◽  
pp. 49-55
Author(s):  
José Alberto Rubino-Martín

This talk presents an overview of the cosmological results derived from the first 15.5 months of observations of the ESA’s <em>Planck</em> mission. These cosmological results are mainly based on the <em>Planck </em>measurements of the cosmic microwave background (CMB) temperature and lensing-potential power spectra, although we also briefly discuss other aspects of the <em>Planck</em> data, as the statistical characterization of the reconstructed CMB maps, or the constraints on cosmological parameters using the number counts of galaxy clusters detected by means of the Sunyaev-Zeldovich effect in the <em>Planck</em> maps. All these results are described in detail in a series of papers released by ESA and the <em>Planck</em> collaboration in March 2013.

2020 ◽  
Vol 493 (2) ◽  
pp. 1708-1724
Author(s):  
Siavash Yasini ◽  
Elena Pierpaoli

ABSTRACT In the frame of the Solar system, the Doppler and aberration effects cause distortions in the form of mode couplings in the cosmic microwave background (CMB) temperature and polarization power spectra and, hence, impose biases on the statistics derived by the moving observer. We explore several aspects of such biases and pay close attention to their effects on CMB polarization, which, previously, have not been examined in detail. A potentially important bias that we introduce here is boost variance—an additional term in cosmic variance, induced by the observer’s motion. Although this additional term is negligible for whole-sky experiments, in partial-sky experiments it can reach 10 per cent (temperature) to 20 per cent (polarization) of the standard cosmic variance (σ). Furthermore, we investigate the significance of motion-induced power and parity asymmetries in TT, EE, and TE as well as potential biases induced in cosmological parameter estimation performed with whole-sky TTTEEE. Using Planck-like simulations, we find that our local motion induces $\sim 1\!-\!2 {{\ \rm per\ cent}}$ hemispherical asymmetry in a wide range of angular scales in the CMB temperature and polarization power spectra; however, it does not imply any significant amount of parity asymmetry or shift in cosmological parameters. Finally, we examine the prospects of measuring the velocity of the Solar system w.r.t. the CMB with future experiments via the mode coupling induced by the Doppler and aberration effects. Using the CMB TT, EE, and TE power spectra up to ℓ = 4000, the Simons Observatory and CMB-S4 can make a dipole-independent measurement of our local velocity, respectively, at 8.5σ and 20σ.


2017 ◽  
Vol 602 ◽  
pp. A41 ◽  
Author(s):  
F. Couchot ◽  
S. Henrot-Versillé ◽  
O. Perdereau ◽  
S. Plaszczynski ◽  
B. Rouillé d’Orfeuil ◽  
...  

We demonstrate that the cosmic microwave background (CMB) temperature-polarization cross-correlation provides accurate and robust constraints on cosmological parameters. We compare them with the results from temperature or polarization and investigate the impact of foregrounds, cosmic variance, and instrumental noise. This analysis makes use of the Planck high-ℓ HiLLiPOP likelihood based on angular power spectra, which takes into account systematics from the instrument and foreground residuals directly modelled using Planck measurements. The temperature-polarization correlation (TE) spectrum is less contaminated by astrophysical emissions than the temperature power spectrum (TT), allowing constraints that are less sensitive to foreground uncertainties to be derived. For ΛCDM parameters, TE gives very competitive results compared to TT. For basic ΛCDM model extensions (such as AL, ∑mν, or Neff), it is still limited by the instrumental noise level in the polarization maps.


2005 ◽  
Vol 14 (02) ◽  
pp. 223-256 ◽  
Author(s):  
PAOLO CIARCELLUTI

This is the second paper of a series devoted to the study of the cosmological implications of the existence of mirror dark matter. The parallel hidden mirror world has the same microphysics as the observable one and couples the latter only gravitationally. The primordial nucleosynthesis bounds demand that the mirror sector should have a smaller temperature T′ than the ordinary one T, and by this reason its evolution can be substantially deviated from the standard cosmology. In this paper we take scalar adiabatic perturbations as the input in a flat Universe, and compute the power spectra for ordinary and mirror CMB and LSS, changing the cosmological parameters, and always comparing with the CDM case. We find differences in both the CMB and LSS power spectra, and we demonstrate that the LSS spectrum is particularly sensitive to the mirror parameters, due to the presence of both the oscillatory features of mirror baryons and the collisional mirror Silk damping. For x<0.3 the mirror baryon–photon decoupling happens before the matter–radiation equality, so that CMB and LSS power spectra in linear regime are equivalent for mirror and CDM cases. For higher x-values the LSS spectra strongly depend on the amount of mirror baryons. Finally, qualitatively comparing with the present observational limits on the CMB and LSS spectra, we show that for x<0.3 the entire dark matter could be made of mirror baryons, while in the case x≳0.3 the pattern of the LSS power spectrum excludes the possibility of dark matter consisting entirely of mirror baryons, but they could present as admixture (up to ~50%) to the conventional CDM.


2020 ◽  
Vol 642 ◽  
pp. A217
Author(s):  
B. Regaldo-Saint Blancard ◽  
F. Levrier ◽  
E. Allys ◽  
E. Bellomi ◽  
F. Boulanger

The statistical characterization of the diffuse magnetized interstellar medium (ISM) and Galactic foregrounds to the cosmic microwave background (CMB) poses a major challenge. To account for their non-Gaussian statistics, we need a data analysis approach capable of efficiently quantifying statistical couplings across scales. This information is encoded in the data, but most of it is lost when using conventional tools, such as one-point statistics and power spectra. The wavelet scattering transform (WST), a low-variance statistical descriptor of non-Gaussian processes introduced in data science, opens a path towards this goal. To establish the methodology, we applied the WST to noise-free maps of dust polarized thermal emission computed from a numerical simulation of magnetohydrodynamical turbulence in the diffuse ISM. We analyzed normalized complex Stokes maps and maps of the polarization fraction and polarization angle. The WST yields a few thousand coefficients; some of them measure the amplitude of the signal at a given scale, and the others characterize the couplings between scales and orientations. The dependence on orientation can be fitted with the reduced wavelet scattering transform (RWST), an angular model introduced in previous works for total intensity maps. The RWST provides a statistical description of the polarization maps, quantifying their multiscale properties in terms of isotropic and anisotropic contributions. It allowed us to exhibit the dependence of the map structure on the orientation of the mean magnetic field and to quantify the non-Gaussianity of the data. We also used RWST coefficients, complemented by additional constraints, to generate random synthetic maps with similar statistics. Their agreement with the original maps demonstrates the comprehensiveness of the statistical description provided by the RWST. This work is a step forward in the analysis of observational data and the modeling of CMB foregrounds. We also release PyWST, a public Python package to perform WST and RWST analyses of two-dimensional data.


Author(s):  
Ryu Makiya ◽  
Chiaki Hikage ◽  
Eiichiro Komatsu

Abstract The thermal Sunyaev–Zeldovich (tSZ) power spectrum is a powerful probe of the present-day amplitude of matter density fluctuations, and has been measured up to $\ell \approx 10^3$ from the Planck data. The largest systematic uncertainty in the interpretation of this data is the so-called “mass bias” parameter B, which relates the true halo mass to the mass proxy used by the Planck team as $M\,_{\rm 500c}^{\rm Planck}=M\,_{\rm 500c}^{\rm true}/B$. Since the power spectrum of the cosmic weak lensing shear is also sensitive to the amplitude of matter density fluctuations via $S_8\equiv \sigma _8 \Omega _{\rm m}^{\alpha }$ with $\alpha \sim 0.5$, we can break the degeneracy between the mass bias and the cosmological parameters by combining the tSZ and cosmic shear power spectra. In this paper, we perform a joint likelihood analysis of the tSZ power spectrum from Planck and the cosmic shear power spectrum from Subaru Hyper Suprime-Cam. Our analysis does not use the primordial cosmic microwave background (CMB) information. We obtain a new constraint on the mass bias as $B = 1.37 ^{+0.15}_{-0.23}$ or $(1-b) = B^{-1}=0.73^{+0.08}_{-0.13}$ ($68\%$ confidence limit), for $\sigma _8 &lt; 0.9$. This value of B is lower than that needed to reconcile the tSZ data with the primordial CMB and CMB lensing data, i.e., $B = 1.64 \pm 0.19$, but is consistent with the mass bias expected from hydrodynamical simulations, $B = 1.28 \pm 0.20$. Thus our results indicate that the mass bias is consistent with the non-thermal pressure support from mass accretion of galaxy clusters via the cosmic structure formation, and that the cosmologies inferred from the tSZ and the cosmic shear are consistent with each other.


2017 ◽  
Vol 597 ◽  
pp. A126 ◽  
Author(s):  
F. Couchot ◽  
S. Henrot-Versillé ◽  
O. Perdereau ◽  
S. Plaszczynski ◽  
B. Rouillé d’Orfeuil ◽  
...  

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