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A measurement of the CMB E-mode angular power spectrum at subdegree scales from 670 square degrees of POLARBEAR data

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2005.06168v1.pdfWorking paper1.66 MBAdobe PDFView/Open
Title: A measurement of the CMB E-mode angular power spectrum at subdegree scales from 670 square degrees of POLARBEAR data
Authors: Adachi, S
Faúndez, MAOA
Arnold, K
Baccigalupi, C
Barron, D
Beck, D
Bianchini, F
Chapman, S
Cheung, K
Chinone, Y
Crowley, K
Dobbs, M
Bouhargani, HE
Elleflot, T
Errard, J
Fabbian, G
Feng, C
Fujino, T
Galitzki, N
Goeckner-Wald, N
Groh, J
Hall, G
Hasegawa, M
Hazumi, M
Hirose, H
Jaffe, AH
Jeong, O
Kaneko, D
Katayama, N
Keating, B
Kikuchi, S
Kisner, T
Kusaka, A
Lee, AT
Leon, D
Linder, E
Lowry, LN
Matsuda, F
Matsumura, T
Minami, Y
Navaroli, M
Nishino, H
Pham, ATP
Poletti, D
Reichardt, CL
Segawa, Y
Siritanasak, P
Tajima, O
Takakura, S
Takatori, S
Tanabe, D
Teply, GP
Tsai, C
Vergès, C
Westbrook, B
Zhou, Y
Item Type: Working Paper
Abstract: We report a measurement of the E-mode polarization power spectrum of the cosmic microwave background (CMB) using 150 GHz data taken from July 2014 to December 2016 with the POLARBEAR experiment. We reach an effective polarization map noise level of $32\,\mu\mathrm{K}$-$\mathrm{arcmin}$ across an observation area of 670 square degrees. We measure the EE power spectrum over the angular multipole range $500 \leq \ell <3000$, tracing the third to seventh acoustic peaks with high sensitivity. The statistical uncertainty on E-mode bandpowers is $\sim 2.3 \mu {\rm K}^2$ at $\ell \sim 1000$ with a systematic uncertainty of 0.5$\mu {\rm K}^2$. The data are consistent with the standard $\Lambda$CDM cosmological model with a probability-to-exceed of 0.38. We combine recent CMB E-mode measurements and make inferences about cosmological parameters in $\Lambda$CDM as well as in extensions to $\Lambda$CDM. Adding the ground-based CMB polarization measurements to the Planck dataset reduces the uncertainty on the Hubble constant by a factor of 1.2 to $H_0 = 67.20 \pm 0.57 {\rm km\,s^{-1} \,Mpc^{-1}}$. When allowing the number of relativistic species ($N_{eff}$) to vary, we find $N_{eff} = 2.94 \pm 0.16$, which is in good agreement with the standard value of 3.046. Instead allowing the primordial helium abundance ($Y_{He}$) to vary, the data favor $Y_{He} = 0.248 \pm 0.012$. This is very close to the expectation of 0.2467 from Big Bang Nucleosynthesis. When varying both $Y_{He}$ and $N_{eff}$, we find $N_{eff} = 2.70 \pm 0.26$ and $Y_{He} = 0.262 \pm 0.015$.
Issue Date: 13-May-2020
URI: http://hdl.handle.net/10044/1/82463
Publisher: arXiv
Copyright Statement: © 2020 The Author(s)
Keywords: astro-ph.CO
astro-ph.CO
astro-ph.CO
astro-ph.CO
Notes: 15 pages, 5 figures, submitted to ApJ
Publication Status: Published
Appears in Collections:Physics
Astrophysics