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CMB anisotropies at second order III: bispectrum from products of the first-order perturbations

We calculate the bispectrum of the Cosmic Microwave Background (CMB) temperature anisotropies induced by the second-order fluctuations in the Boltzmann equation. In this paper, which is one of a series of papers on the numerical calculation of the bispectrum from the second-order fluctuations, we co...

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Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Nitta, Daisuke, Komatsu, Eiichiro, Bartolo, Nicola, Matarrese, Sabino, Riotto, Antonio
Lenguaje:eng
Publicado: 2009
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://dx.doi.org/10.1088/1475-7516/2009/05/014
http://cds.cern.ch/record/1165370
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author Nitta, Daisuke
Komatsu, Eiichiro
Bartolo, Nicola
Matarrese, Sabino
Riotto, Antonio
author_facet Nitta, Daisuke
Komatsu, Eiichiro
Bartolo, Nicola
Matarrese, Sabino
Riotto, Antonio
author_sort Nitta, Daisuke
collection CERN
description We calculate the bispectrum of the Cosmic Microwave Background (CMB) temperature anisotropies induced by the second-order fluctuations in the Boltzmann equation. In this paper, which is one of a series of papers on the numerical calculation of the bispectrum from the second-order fluctuations, we consider the terms that are products of the first-order perturbations, and leave intrinsically second-order terms and perturbations in the recombination history to the subsequent papers. We show that the bispectrum has the maximum signal in the squeezed triangles, similar to the local-type primordial bispectrum, as both types generate non-linearities via products of the first-order terms in position space. However, detailed calculations show that their shapes are sufficiently different: the cross-correlation coefficient reaches 0.5 at the maximum multipole of l_{max}~ 200, and then weakens to 0.3 at l_{max}~ 2000. The differences in shape arise from (i) the way the acoustic oscillations affect the bispectrum, and (ii) the second-order effects not being scale-invariant. This implies that the contamination of the primordial bispectrum due to the second-order effects (from the products of the first-order terms) is small. The expected signal-to-noise ratio of the products of the first-order terms is ~ 0.4 at l_{max}~ 2000 for a full-sky, cosmic variance limited experiment. We therefore conclude that the products of the first-order terms ma y be safely ignored in the analysis of the future CMB experiments. The expected contamination of the local-form f_{NL} is f^{local}_{NL}~ 0.9 at l_{max}~ 200, and f^{local}_{NL}~ 0.5 at l_{max}~ 2000.
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institution Organización Europea para la Investigación Nuclear
language eng
publishDate 2009
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spelling cern-11653702021-05-03T20:09:00Zdoi:10.1088/1475-7516/2009/05/014http://cds.cern.ch/record/1165370engNitta, DaisukeKomatsu, EiichiroBartolo, NicolaMatarrese, SabinoRiotto, AntonioCMB anisotropies at second order III: bispectrum from products of the first-order perturbationsAstrophysics and AstronomyWe calculate the bispectrum of the Cosmic Microwave Background (CMB) temperature anisotropies induced by the second-order fluctuations in the Boltzmann equation. In this paper, which is one of a series of papers on the numerical calculation of the bispectrum from the second-order fluctuations, we consider the terms that are products of the first-order perturbations, and leave intrinsically second-order terms and perturbations in the recombination history to the subsequent papers. We show that the bispectrum has the maximum signal in the squeezed triangles, similar to the local-type primordial bispectrum, as both types generate non-linearities via products of the first-order terms in position space. However, detailed calculations show that their shapes are sufficiently different: the cross-correlation coefficient reaches 0.5 at the maximum multipole of l_{max}~ 200, and then weakens to 0.3 at l_{max}~ 2000. The differences in shape arise from (i) the way the acoustic oscillations affect the bispectrum, and (ii) the second-order effects not being scale-invariant. This implies that the contamination of the primordial bispectrum due to the second-order effects (from the products of the first-order terms) is small. The expected signal-to-noise ratio of the products of the first-order terms is ~ 0.4 at l_{max}~ 2000 for a full-sky, cosmic variance limited experiment. We therefore conclude that the products of the first-order terms ma y be safely ignored in the analysis of the future CMB experiments. The expected contamination of the local-form f_{NL} is f^{local}_{NL}~ 0.9 at l_{max}~ 200, and f^{local}_{NL}~ 0.5 at l_{max}~ 2000.arXiv:0903.0894TCC-014-09oai:cds.cern.ch:11653702009-03-06
spellingShingle Astrophysics and Astronomy
Nitta, Daisuke
Komatsu, Eiichiro
Bartolo, Nicola
Matarrese, Sabino
Riotto, Antonio
CMB anisotropies at second order III: bispectrum from products of the first-order perturbations
title CMB anisotropies at second order III: bispectrum from products of the first-order perturbations
title_full CMB anisotropies at second order III: bispectrum from products of the first-order perturbations
title_fullStr CMB anisotropies at second order III: bispectrum from products of the first-order perturbations
title_full_unstemmed CMB anisotropies at second order III: bispectrum from products of the first-order perturbations
title_short CMB anisotropies at second order III: bispectrum from products of the first-order perturbations
title_sort cmb anisotropies at second order iii: bispectrum from products of the first-order perturbations
topic Astrophysics and Astronomy
url https://dx.doi.org/10.1088/1475-7516/2009/05/014
http://cds.cern.ch/record/1165370
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AT bartolonicola cmbanisotropiesatsecondorderiiibispectrumfromproductsofthefirstorderperturbations
AT matarresesabino cmbanisotropiesatsecondorderiiibispectrumfromproductsofthefirstorderperturbations
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