210 research outputs found
The Atacama Cosmology Telescope: Two-Season ACTPol Spectra and Parameters
We present the temperature and polarization angular power spectra measured by
the Atacama Cosmology Telescope Polarimeter (ACTPol). We analyze night-time
data collected during 2013-14 using two detector arrays at 149 GHz, from 548
deg of sky on the celestial equator. We use these spectra, and the spectra
measured with the MBAC camera on ACT from 2008-10, in combination with Planck
and WMAP data to estimate cosmological parameters from the temperature,
polarization, and temperature-polarization cross-correlations. We find the new
ACTPol data to be consistent with the LCDM model. The ACTPol
temperature-polarization cross-spectrum now provides stronger constraints on
multiple parameters than the ACTPol temperature spectrum, including the baryon
density, the acoustic peak angular scale, and the derived Hubble constant.
Adding the new data to planck temperature data tightens the limits on damping
tail parameters, for example reducing the joint uncertainty on the number of
neutrino species and the primordial helium fraction by 20%.Comment: 23 pages, 25 figure
The Atacama Cosmology Telescope: Cosmological parameters from three seasons of data
We present constraints on cosmological and astrophysical parameters from
high-resolution microwave background maps at 148 GHz and 218 GHz made by the
Atacama Cosmology Telescope (ACT) in three seasons of observations from 2008 to
2010. A model of primary cosmological and secondary foreground parameters is
fit to the map power spectra and lensing deflection power spectrum, including
contributions from both the thermal Sunyaev-Zeldovich (tSZ) effect and the
kinematic Sunyaev-Zeldovich (kSZ) effect, Poisson and correlated anisotropy
from unresolved infrared sources, radio sources, and the correlation between
the tSZ effect and infrared sources. The power ell^2 C_ell/2pi of the thermal
SZ power spectrum at 148 GHz is measured to be 3.4 +\- 1.4 muK^2 at ell=3000,
while the corresponding amplitude of the kinematic SZ power spectrum has a 95%
confidence level upper limit of 8.6 muK^2. Combining ACT power spectra with the
WMAP 7-year temperature and polarization power spectra, we find excellent
consistency with the LCDM model. We constrain the number of effective
relativistic degrees of freedom in the early universe to be Neff=2.79 +\- 0.56,
in agreement with the canonical value of Neff=3.046 for three massless
neutrinos. We constrain the sum of the neutrino masses to be Sigma m_nu < 0.39
eV at 95% confidence when combining ACT and WMAP 7-year data with BAO and
Hubble constant measurements. We constrain the amount of primordial helium to
be Yp = 0.225 +\- 0.034, and measure no variation in the fine structure
constant alpha since recombination, with alpha/alpha0 = 1.004 +/- 0.005. We
also find no evidence for any running of the scalar spectral index, dns/dlnk =
-0.004 +\- 0.012.Comment: 26 pages, 22 figures. This paper is a companion to Das et al. (2013)
and Dunkley et al. (2013). Matches published JCAP versio
Evidence of lensing of the cosmic microwave background by dark matter halos
We present evidence of the gravitational lensing of the cosmic microwave background by 1013 solar
mass dark matter halos. Lensing convergence maps from the Atacama Cosmology Telescope Polarimeter
(ACTPol) are stacked at the positions of around 12 000 optically selected CMASS galaxies from the
SDSS-III/BOSS survey. The mean lensing signal is consistent with simulated dark matter halo profiles and
is favored over a null signal at 3.2σ significance. This result demonstrates the potential of microwave
background lensing to probe the dark matter distribution in galaxy group and galaxy cluster halos
The atacama cosmology telescope: lensing of CMB temperature and polarization derived from cosmic infrared background cross-correlation
We present a measurement of the gravitational lensing of the Cosmic Microwave Background (CMB) temperature and polarization fields obtained by cross-correlating the reconstructed convergence signal from the first season of Atacama Cosmology Telescope Polarimeter data at 146 GHz with Cosmic Infrared Background (CIB) fluctuations measured using the Planck satellite. Using an effective overlap area of 92.7 square degrees, we detect gravitational lensing of the CMB polarization by large-scale structure at a statistical significance of . Combining both CMB temperature and polarization data gives a lensing detection at significance. A B-mode polarization lensing signal is present with a significance of . We also present the first measurement of CMB lensing–CIB correlation at small scales corresponding to . Null tests and systematic checks show that our results are not significantly biased by astrophysical or instrumental systematic effects, including Galactic dust. Fitting our measurements to the best-fit lensing-CIB cross-power spectrum measured in Planck data, scaled by an amplitude A, gives (stat.) ± 0.06(syst.), consistent with the Planck results
The Atacama Cosmology Telescope: Combined kinematic and thermal Sunyaev-Zel'dovich measurements from BOSS CMASS and LOWZ halos
The scattering of cosmic microwave background (CMB) photons off the
free-electron gas in galaxies and clusters leaves detectable imprints on high
resolution CMB maps: the thermal and kinematic Sunyaev-Zel'dovich effects (tSZ
and kSZ respectively). We use combined microwave maps from the Atacama
Cosmology Telescope (ACT) DR5 and Planck in combination with the CMASS and LOWZ
galaxy catalogs from the Baryon Oscillation Spectroscopic Survey (BOSS DR10 and
DR12), to study the gas associated with these galaxy groups. Using individual
reconstructed velocities, we perform a stacking analysis and reject the no-kSZ
hypothesis at 6.5, the highest significance to date. This directly
translates into a measurement of the electron number density profile, and thus
of the gas density profile. Despite the limited signal to noise, the
measurement shows at high significance that the gas density profile is more
extended than the dark matter density profile, for any reasonable baryon
abundance (formally for the cosmic baryon abundance). We
simultaneously measure the tSZ signal, i.e. the electron thermal pressure
profile of the same CMASS objects, and reject the no-tSZ hypothesis at
10. We combine tSZ and kSZ measurements to estimate the electron
temperature to 20% precision in several aperture bins, and find it comparable
to the virial temperature. In a companion paper, we analyze these measurements
to constrain the gas thermodynamics and the properties of feedback inside
galaxy groups. We present the corresponding LOWZ measurements in this paper,
ruling out a null kSZ (tSZ) signal at 2.9 (13.9), and leave their
interpretation to future work. Our stacking software ThumbStack is publicly
available at https://github.com/EmmanuelSchaan/ThumbStack and directly
applicable to future Simons Observatory and CMB-S4 data.Comment: Accepted in Physical Review D, Editors' Suggestio
The Atacama Cosmology Telescope: CMB Polarization at
We report on measurements of the cosmic microwave background (CMB) and
celestial polarization at 146 GHz made with the Atacama Cosmology Telescope
Polarimeter (ACTPol) in its first three months of observing. Four regions of
sky covering a total of 270 square degrees were mapped with an angular
resolution of . The map noise levels in the four regions are between 11
and 17 K-arcmin. We present TT, TE, EE, TB, EB, and BB power spectra from
three of these regions. The observed E-mode polarization power spectrum,
displaying six acoustic peaks in the range , is an excellent fit
to the prediction of the best-fit cosmological models from WMAP9+ACT and Planck
data. The polarization power spectrum, which mainly reflects primordial plasma
velocity perturbations, provides an independent determination of cosmological
parameters consistent with those based on the temperature power spectrum, which
results mostly from primordial density perturbations. We find that without
masking any point sources in the EE data at , the Poisson tail of
the EE power spectrum due to polarized point sources has an amplitude less than
K at at 95\% confidence. Finally, we report that
the Crab Nebula, an important polarization calibration source at microwave
frequencies, has 8.7\% polarization with an angle of when smoothed with a Gaussian beam.Comment: 16 pages, 15 figures, 5 table
Atacama Cosmology Telescope: Component-separated maps of CMB temperature and the thermal Sunyaev-Zel’dovich effect
Optimal analyses of many signals in the cosmic microwave background (CMB) require map-level extraction of individual components in the microwave sky, rather than measurements at the power spectrum level alone. To date, nearly all map-level component separation in CMB analyses has been performed exclusively using satellite data. In this paper, we implement a component separation method based on the internal linear combination (ILC) approach which we have designed to optimally account for the anisotropic noise (in the 2D Fourier domain) often found in ground-based CMB experiments. Using this method, we combine multifrequency data from the Planck satellite and the Atacama Cosmology Telescope Polarimeter (ACTPol) to construct the first wide-area (≈2100 sq. deg.), arcminute-resolution component-separated maps of the CMB temperature anisotropy and the thermal Sunyaev-Zel’dovich (tSZ) effect sourced by the inverse-Compton scattering of CMB photons off hot, ionized gas. Our ILC pipeline allows for explicit deprojection of various contaminating signals, including a modified blackbody approximation of the cosmic infrared background (CIB) spectral energy distribution. The cleaned CMB maps will be a useful resource for CMB lensing reconstruction, kinematic SZ cross-correlations, and primordial non-Gaussianity studies. The tSZ maps will be used to study the pressure profiles of galaxies, groups, and clusters through cross-correlations with halo catalogs, with dust contamination controlled via CIB deprojection. The data products described in this paper are available on LAMBDA
The Atacama Cosmology Telescope: Modeling the Gas Thermodynamics in BOSS CMASS galaxies from Kinematic and Thermal Sunyaev-Zel'dovich Measurements
The thermal and kinematic Sunyaev-Zel'dovich effects (tSZ, kSZ) probe the
thermodynamic properties of the circumgalactic and intracluster medium (CGM and
ICM) of galaxies, groups, and clusters, since they are proportional,
respectively, to the integrated electron pressure and momentum along the
line-of-sight. We present constraints on the gas thermodynamics of CMASS
galaxies in the Baryon Oscillation Spectroscopic Survey (BOSS) using new
measurements of the kSZ and tSZ signals obtained in a companion paper.
Combining kSZ and tSZ measurements, we measure within our model the amplitude
of energy injection , where is the stellar
mass, to be , and the amplitude of the
non-thermal pressure profile to be (2),
indicating that less than 20% of the total pressure within the virial radius is
due to a non-thermal component. We estimate the effects of including baryons in
the modeling of weak-lensing galaxy cross-correlation measurements using the
best fit density profile from the kSZ measurement. Our estimate reduces the
difference between the original theoretical model and the weak-lensing galaxy
cross-correlation measurements in arXiv:1611.08606 by half, but does not fully
reconcile it. Comparing the kSZ and tSZ measurements to cosmological
simulations, we find that they under predict the CGM pressure and to a lesser
extent the CGM density at larger radii. This suggests that the energy injected
via feedback models in the simulations that we compared against does not
sufficiently heat the gas at these radii. We do not find significant
disagreement at smaller radii. These measurements provide novel tests of
current and future simulations. This work demonstrates the power of joint, high
signal-to-noise kSZ and tSZ observations, upon which future cross-correlation
studies will improve.Comment: Accepted for publication in Physical Review D. Editors' Suggestion.
New Fig. 1-2, Tab.
Atacama Cosmology Telescope: Weighing Distant Clusters with the Most Ancient Light
We use gravitational lensing of the cosmic microwave background (CMB) to measure the mass of the most distant blindly selected sample of galaxy clusters on which a lensing measurement has been performed to date. In CMB data from the the Atacama Cosmology Telescope and the Planck satellite, we detect the stacked lensing effect from 677 near-infrared-selected galaxy clusters from the Massive and Distant Clusters of WISE Survey (MaDCoWS), which have a mean redshift of ⟨z⟩ = 1.08. There are currently no representative optical weak lensing measurements of clusters that match the distance and average mass of this sample. We detect the lensing signal with a significance of 4.2σ. We model the signal with a halo model framework to find the mean mass of the population from which these clusters are drawn. Assuming that the clusters follow Navarro–Frenk–White (NFW) density profiles, we infer a mean mass of ⟨M_(500c)⟩ = (1.7±0.4)×10¹⁴M⊙. We consider systematic uncertainties from cluster redshift errors, centering errors, and the shape of the NFW profile. These are all smaller than 30% of our reported uncertainty. This work highlights the potential of CMB lensing to enable cosmological constraints from the abundance of distant clusters populating ever larger volumes of the observable universe, beyond the capabilities of optical weak lensing measurements
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