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CMBR Observations
The status of a given cosmological model can be broadly measured by its
capability to provide answers to two distinct aspects: the origin and evolution
of primordial perturbations towards large scale structure distribution (LSS) in
the Universe and the nature and dynamics of the homogeneous background. Cosmic
microwave background radiation (CMB) carries a wealth of cosmological
information to address both aspects, which can be extracted from ts black body
spectrum, temperature anisotropies and polarization.
CMB spectrum comes from an epoch when the universe was in thermodynamic
equilibrium, before the recombination and decoupling eras, about 300.000 years
after the Big Bang. CMB anisotropies are the imprint of primordial density
fluctuations in the radiation field and were generated at the end of decoupling
(
).
Polarization has primordial (before decoupling) and secondary (after decoupling)
causes, from space-time distortion caused by primordial gravitational waves to
Thomson scattering during the photon-baryon coupling to secondary scattering at
reionization times.
Spectrum measurements demand sensitivities
mK to allow the investigation of possible spectral distortions. The level of CMB
anisotropies and of their polarized fraction are
tens of
for
and
for
.
The detection of such small signals can be significantly hampered by foreground
contamination from the Galaxy and extragalactic radio sources. In particular,
the synchrotron component and its high degree of polarization represent a great
challenge to measurement at frequencies below 15 GHz.
The CMB power spectrum can be broadly divided in 3 regions, associated with
angular scales on the sky. Angular scales larger than about
on the sky, corresponding to power spectrum l-scales from l=2 to l=90, probe
regions beyond the "causal horizon" (
)
at the decoupling time. Scales between
and
explore the physics of baryon-photon coupling, which is usually treated as a
coupled harmonic oscillator. This coupling causes the imprint of acoustic
oscillations in the ionized plasma, seen as acoustic peaks in the CMB power
spectrum. Both scales probe a still linear universe and the prediction of CMB
physics in these scales are very well confirmed by a large number of experiments
since the first detection of anisotropies by the COBE satellite [20].
The smallest scales (below )
start to probe the Universe when it is about to enter a non-linear regime and
the CMB data becomes dominated by secondary, non-primordial fluctuations. In
these scales the major source of information come from the large scale galaxy
surveys, such as the SDSS, 2dF and 2MASS.
Next: Dark Energy Up:
CMBR Observations Previous:
CMBR Observations
carlos alexandre wuensche 2005-07-07
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