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Toward an Understanding of Foreground Emission in the BICEP2 Region

<!--HTML-->BICEP2 has reported the detection of a degree-scale B-mode polarization pattern in the Cosmic Microwave Background (CMB) and has interpreted the measurement as evidence for primordial gravitational waves. Motivated by the profound importance of the discovery of gravitational waves f...

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Autor principal: Flauger, Raphael
Lenguaje:eng
Publicado: 2014
Materias:
Acceso en línea:http://cds.cern.ch/record/1741689
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author Flauger, Raphael
author_facet Flauger, Raphael
author_sort Flauger, Raphael
collection CERN
description <!--HTML-->BICEP2 has reported the detection of a degree-scale B-mode polarization pattern in the Cosmic Microwave Background (CMB) and has interpreted the measurement as evidence for primordial gravitational waves. Motivated by the profound importance of the discovery of gravitational waves from the early Universe, I will discuss to what extent a combination of Galactic foregrounds and lensed E-modes could be responsible for the signal. I will present independent estimates of the dust polarization signal in the BICEP2 region using several different approaches. These estimates of the dust polarization signal in the BICEP2 region are consistent with each other, but the expected amplitude of the dust polarization power spectrum is uncertain by about a factor of three. The lower end of the prediction leaves room for a primordial contribution, but at the higher end the dust in combination with the standard CMB lensing signal could account for the BICEP2 observations, without requiring the existence of primordial gravitational waves. By studying the cross-correlations between the pre-Planck templates used in the BICEP2 analysis and between different versions of a data-based template, we emphasize that cross-correlations between models are likely underestimates of the contribution of foregrounds to the map. These results suggest that BICEP1 and BICEP2 data alone cannot distinguish between foregrounds and a primordial gravitational wave signal, and that future Keck Array observations at 100 GHz and Planck observations at higher frequencies will be crucial to determine whether the signal is of primordial origin. Luckily, we will not have to wait very long until this question is resolved.
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spelling cern-17416892022-11-02T22:35:15Zhttp://cds.cern.ch/record/1741689engFlauger, RaphaelToward an Understanding of Foreground Emission in the BICEP2 RegionToward an Understanding of Foreground Emission in the BICEP2 RegionTH Theoretical Seminar<!--HTML-->BICEP2 has reported the detection of a degree-scale B-mode polarization pattern in the Cosmic Microwave Background (CMB) and has interpreted the measurement as evidence for primordial gravitational waves. Motivated by the profound importance of the discovery of gravitational waves from the early Universe, I will discuss to what extent a combination of Galactic foregrounds and lensed E-modes could be responsible for the signal. I will present independent estimates of the dust polarization signal in the BICEP2 region using several different approaches. These estimates of the dust polarization signal in the BICEP2 region are consistent with each other, but the expected amplitude of the dust polarization power spectrum is uncertain by about a factor of three. The lower end of the prediction leaves room for a primordial contribution, but at the higher end the dust in combination with the standard CMB lensing signal could account for the BICEP2 observations, without requiring the existence of primordial gravitational waves. By studying the cross-correlations between the pre-Planck templates used in the BICEP2 analysis and between different versions of a data-based template, we emphasize that cross-correlations between models are likely underestimates of the contribution of foregrounds to the map. These results suggest that BICEP1 and BICEP2 data alone cannot distinguish between foregrounds and a primordial gravitational wave signal, and that future Keck Array observations at 100 GHz and Planck observations at higher frequencies will be crucial to determine whether the signal is of primordial origin. Luckily, we will not have to wait very long until this question is resolved.oai:cds.cern.ch:17416892014
spellingShingle TH Theoretical Seminar
Flauger, Raphael
Toward an Understanding of Foreground Emission in the BICEP2 Region
title Toward an Understanding of Foreground Emission in the BICEP2 Region
title_full Toward an Understanding of Foreground Emission in the BICEP2 Region
title_fullStr Toward an Understanding of Foreground Emission in the BICEP2 Region
title_full_unstemmed Toward an Understanding of Foreground Emission in the BICEP2 Region
title_short Toward an Understanding of Foreground Emission in the BICEP2 Region
title_sort toward an understanding of foreground emission in the bicep2 region
topic TH Theoretical Seminar
url http://cds.cern.ch/record/1741689
work_keys_str_mv AT flaugerraphael towardanunderstandingofforegroundemissioninthebicep2region