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Detection of B-mode polarization at degree angular scales by BICEP2.

Authors :
Ade PA
Aikin RW
Barkats D
Benton SJ
Bischoff CA
Bock JJ
Brevik JA
Buder I
Bullock E
Dowell CD
Duband L
Filippini JP
Fliescher S
Golwala SR
Halpern M
Hasselfield M
Hildebrandt SR
Hilton GC
Hristov VV
Irwin KD
Karkare KS
Kaufman JP
Keating BG
Kernasovskiy SA
Kovac JM
Kuo CL
Leitch EM
Lueker M
Mason P
Netterfield CB
Nguyen HT
O'Brient R
Ogburn RW 4th
Orlando A
Pryke C
Reintsema CD
Richter S
Schwarz R
Sheehy CD
Staniszewski ZK
Sudiwala RV
Teply GP
Tolan JE
Turner AD
Vieregg AG
Wong CL
Yoon KW
Source :
Physical review letters [Phys Rev Lett] 2014 Jun 20; Vol. 112 (24), pp. 241101. Date of Electronic Publication: 2014 Jun 19.
Publication Year :
2014

Abstract

We report results from the BICEP2 experiment, a cosmic microwave background (CMB) polarimeter specifically designed to search for the signal of inflationary gravitational waves in the B-mode power spectrum around ℓ∼80. The telescope comprised a 26 cm aperture all-cold refracting optical system equipped with a focal plane of 512 antenna coupled transition edge sensor 150 GHz bolometers each with temperature sensitivity of ≈300  μK(CMB)√s. BICEP2 observed from the South Pole for three seasons from 2010 to 2012. A low-foreground region of sky with an effective area of 380 square deg was observed to a depth of 87 nK deg in Stokes Q and U. In this paper we describe the observations, data reduction, maps, simulations, and results. We find an excess of B-mode power over the base lensed-ΛCDM expectation in the range 30 < ℓ < 150, inconsistent with the null hypothesis at a significance of >5σ. Through jackknife tests and simulations based on detailed calibration measurements we show that systematic contamination is much smaller than the observed excess. Cross correlating against WMAP 23 GHz maps we find that Galactic synchrotron makes a negligible contribution to the observed signal. We also examine a number of available models of polarized dust emission and find that at their default parameter values they predict power ∼(5-10)× smaller than the observed excess signal (with no significant cross-correlation with our maps). However, these models are not sufficiently constrained by external public data to exclude the possibility of dust emission bright enough to explain the entire excess signal. Cross correlating BICEP2 against 100 GHz maps from the BICEP1 experiment, the excess signal is confirmed with 3σ significance and its spectral index is found to be consistent with that of the CMB, disfavoring dust at 1.7σ. The observed B-mode power spectrum is well fit by a lensed-ΛCDM+tensor theoretical model with tensor-to-scalar ratio r = 0.20_(-0.05)(+0.07), with r = 0 disfavored at 7.0σ. Accounting for the contribution of foreground, dust will shift this value downward by an amount which will be better constrained with upcoming data sets.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
1079-7114
Volume :
112
Issue :
24
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
Physical review letters
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
24996078
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevLett.112.241101