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Archive | 2016

Planck 2015 results: XXI. The integrated Sachs-Wolfe effect - eScholarship

P. A. R. Ade; N. Aghanim; M. Arnaud; M. Ashdown; J. Aumont; C. Baccigalupi; A. J. Banday; R. B. Barreiro; Nicola Bartolo; S. Basak; E. Battaner; K. Benabed; A. Benoît; A. Benoit-Lévy; J.-P. Bernard; M. Bersanelli; P. Bielewicz; J. J. Bock; A. Bonaldi; L. Bonavera; J. Borrill; F. R. Bouchet; M. Bucher; C. Burigana; R. C. Butler; E. Calabrese; J.-F. Cardoso; B. Casaponsa; A. Catalano; A. Challinor

This paper presents a study of the integrated Sachs-Wolfe (ISW) effect from the Planck 2015 temperature and polarization data release. This secondary cosmic microwave background (CMB) anisotropy caused by the large-scale time-evolving gravitational potential is probed from different perspectives. The CMB is cross-correlated with different large-scale structure (LSS) tracers: radio sources from the NVSS catalogue; galaxies from the optical SDSS and the infrared WISE surveys; and the Planck 2015 convergence lensing map. The joint cross-correlation of the CMB with the tracers yields a detection at 4σ where most of the signal-to-noise is due to the Planck lensing and the NVSS radio catalogue. In fact, the ISW effect is detected from the Planck data only at ≈3σ (through the ISW-lensing bispectrum), which is similar to the detection level achieved by combining the cross-correlation signal coming from all the galaxy catalogues mentioned above. We study the ability of the ISW effect to place constraints on the dark-energy parameters; in particular, we show that ΩΛ is detected at more than 3σ. This cross-correlation analysis is performed only with the Planck temperature data, since the polarization scales available in the 2015 release do not permit significant improvement of the CMB-LSS cross-correlation detectability. Nevertheless, the Planck polarization data are used to study the anomalously large ISW signal previously reported through the aperture photometry on stacked CMB features at the locations of known superclusters and supervoids, which is in conflict with ΛCDM expectations. We find that the current Planck polarization data do not exclude that this signal could be caused by the ISW effect. In addition, the stacking of the Planck lensing map on the locations of superstructures exhibits a positive cross-correlation with these large-scale structures. Finally, we have improved our previous reconstruction of the ISW temperature fluctuations by combining the information encoded in all the previously mentioned LSS tracers. In particular, we construct a map of the ISW secondary anisotropies and the corresponding uncertainties map, obtained from simulations. We also explore the reconstruction of the ISW anisotropies caused by the large-scale structure traced by the 2MASS Photometric Redshift Survey (2MPZ) by directly inverting the density field into the gravitational potential field.


Archive | 2014

Planck 2013 results. XX. Cosmology from Sunyaev-Zeldovich cluster counts - eScholarship

J.A. Tauber; P. A. R. Ade; N. Aghanim; C. Armitage-Caplan; M. Arnaud; M. Ashdown; F. Atrio-Barandela; J. Aumont; C. Baccigalupi; A. J. Banday; R. B. Barreiro; R. Barrena; J. G. Bartlett; E. Battaner; Richard A. Battye; K. Benabed; A. Benoît; A. Benoit-Lévy; J.-P. Bernard; M. Bersanelli; P. Bielewicz; I. Bikmaev; A Blanchard; J. Bobin; J. J. Bock; H. Böhringer; A. Bonaldi; J. Borrill; F. R. Bouchet; Herve Bourdin

We present constraints on cosmological parameters using number counts as a function of redshift for a sub-sample of 189 galaxy clusters from the Planck SZ (PSZ) catalogue. The PSZ is selected through the signature of the Sunyaev-Zeldovich (SZ) effect, and the sub-sample used here has a signal-to-noise threshold of seven, with each object confirmed as a cluster and all but one with a redshift estimate. We discuss the completeness of the sample and our construction of a likelihood analysis. Using a relation between mass M and SZ signal Y calibrated to X-ray measurements, we derive constraints on the power spectrum amplitude sigma(8) and matter density parameter Omega(m) in a flat Lambda CDM model. We test the robustness of our estimates and find that possible biases in the Y-M relation and the halo mass function are larger than the statistical uncertainties from the cluster sample. Assuming the X-ray determined mass to be biased low relative to the true mass by between zero and 30%, motivated by comparison of the observed mass scaling relations to those from a set of numerical simulations, we find that sigma(8) = 0.75 +/- 0.03, Omega(m) = 0.29 +/- 0.02, and sigma(8)(Omega(m)/0.27)(0.3) = 0.764 +/- 0.025. The value of sigma(8) is degenerate with the mass bias; if the latter is fixed to a value of 20% (the central value from numerical simulations) we find sigma(8)(Omega(m)/0.27)(0.3) = 0.78 +/- 0.01 and a tighter one-dimensional range sigma(8) = 0.77 +/- 0.02. We find that the larger values of sigma(8) and Omega(m) preferred by Plancks measurements of the primary CMB anisotropies can be accommodated by a mass bias of about 40%. Alternatively, consistency with the primary CMB constraints can be achieved by inclusion of processes that suppress power on small scales relative to the Lambda CDM model, such as a component of massive neutrinos. We place our results in the context of other determinations of cosmological parameters, and discuss issues that need to be resolved in order to make further progress in this field.


Archive | 2013

Planck intermediate results XI

Peter A. R. Ade; N. Aghanim; M. Arnaud; M. Ashdown; F. Atrio-Barandela; J. Aumont; C. Baccigalupi; A. Balbi; A. J. Banday; R. B. Barreiro; R. Barrena; J. G. Bartlett; E. Battaner; K. Benabed; J.-P. Bernard; M. Bersanelli; I. Bikmaev; J. J. Bock; Hans Boehringer; A. Bonaldi; J. R. Bond; J. Borrill; F. R. Bouchet; Herve Bourdin; R. Burenin; C. Burigana; R. C. Butler; P. Cabella; A. Chamballu; Ranga-Ram Chary

We present the scaling relation between Sunyaev-Zeldovich (SZ) signal and stellar mass for almost 260,000 locally brightest galaxies (LBGs) selected from the Sloan Digital Sky Survey (SDSS). These are predominantly the central galaxies of their dark matter halos. We calibrate the stellar-to-halo mass conversion using realistic mock catalogues based on the Millennium Simulation. Applying a multi-frequency matched filter to the Planck data for each LBG, and averaging the results in bins of stellar mass, we measure the mean SZ signal down to M-* similar to 2 x 10(11) M-circle dot, with a clear indication of signal at even lower stellar mass. We derive the scaling relation between SZ signal and halo mass by assigning halo properties from our mock catalogues to the real LBGs and simulating the Planck observation process. This relation shows no evidence for deviation from a power law over a halo mass range extending from rich clusters down to M-500 similar to 2 x 10(13) M-circle dot, and there is a clear indication of signal down to M-500 similar to 4 x 10(12) M-circle dot. Plancks SZ detections in such low-mass halos imply that about a quarter of all baryons have now been seen in the form of hot halo gas, and that this gas must be less concentrated than the dark matter in such halos in order to remain consistent with X-ray observations. At the high-mass end, the measured SZ signal is 20 % lower than found from observations of X-ray clusters, a difference consistent with the magnitude of Malmquist bias effects that were previously estimated for the X-ray sample.


Archive | 2013

Planck intermediate results IX

Peter A. R. Ade; N. Aghanim; M. Arnaud; M. Ashdown; F. Atrio-Barandela; J. Aumont; C. Baccigalupi; A. Balbi; A. J. Banday; R. B. Barreiro; J. G. Bartlett; E. Battaner; K. Benabed; A. Benoît; J.-P. Bernard; M. Bersanelli; A. Bonaldi; J. R. Bond; J. Borrill; F. R. Bouchet; C. Burigana; P. Cabella; Judith Cardoso; A. Catalano; L. Cayón; Ranga-Ram Chary; L.-Y Chiang; P. R. Christensen; D. L. Clements; L. P. L. Colombo

Using precise full-sky observations from Planck, and applying several methods of component separation, we identify and characterise the emission from the Galactic “haze” at microwave wavelengths. The haze is a distinct component of diffuse Galactic emission, roughly centered on the Galactic centre, and extends to | b | ~ 35−50° in Galactic latitude and | l | ~ 15−20° in longitude. By combining the Planck data with observations from the Wilkinson Microwave Anisotropy Probe, we were able to determine the spectrum of this emission to high accuracy, unhindered by the strong systematic biases present in previous analyses. The derived spectrum is consistent with power-law emission with a spectral index of −2.56 ± 0.05, thus excluding free-free emission as the source and instead favouring hard-spectrum synchrotron radiation from an electron population with a spectrum (number density per energy) dN/dE ∝ E-2.1. At Galactic latitudes | b | < 30°, the microwave haze morphology is consistent with that of the Fermi gamma-ray “haze” or “bubbles”, while at b ~ −50° we have identified an edge in the microwave haze that is spatially coincident with the edge in the gamma-ray bubbles. Taken together, this indicates that we have a multi-wavelength view of a distinct component of our Galaxy. Given both the very hard spectrum and the extended nature of the emission, it is highly unlikely that the haze electrons result from supernova shocks in the Galactic disk. Instead, a new astrophysical mechanism for cosmic-ray acceleration in the inner Galaxy is implied.


arXiv: Cosmology and Nongalactic Astrophysics | 2018

Planck 2018 results. VIII. Gravitational lensing

N. Aghanim; Y. Akrami; M. Ashdown; J. Aumont; C. Baccigalupi; M. Ballardini; A. J. Banday; R. B. Barreiro; Nicola Bartolo; S. Basak; K. Benabed; J.-P. Bernard; M. Bersanelli; P. Bielewicz; J. J. Bock; J. Borrill; F. R. Bouchet; F. Boulanger; M. Bucher; C. Burigana; E. Calabrese; J-F Cardoso; J. Carron; A. Challinor; H. C. Chiang; L. P. L. Colombo; C. Combet; B. P. Crill; F. Cuttaia; Paolo de Bernardis

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F. R. Bouchet

Institut d'Astrophysique de Paris

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K. Benabed

Institut d'Astrophysique de Paris

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N. Aghanim

Université Paris-Saclay

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J. Borrill

University of California

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M. Ashdown

University of Cambridge

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C. Baccigalupi

International School for Advanced Studies

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R. B. Barreiro

Spanish National Research Council

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J. J. Bock

California Institute of Technology

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