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Testing Primordial non-Gaussianities in CMB Anisotropies

Testing Primordial non-Gaussianities in CMB Anisotropies. Michele Liguori University of Cambridge, DAMTP. Outline. CMB non-Gaussianity: primordial and post-inflationary 2 nd order contributions. Tests of Gaussianity: NG estimators and NG CMB maps The CMB angular bispectrum

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Testing Primordial non-Gaussianities in CMB Anisotropies

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  1. Testing Primordial non-Gaussianities in CMB Anisotropies Michele Liguori University of Cambridge, DAMTP

  2. Outline • CMB non-Gaussianity: primordial and post-inflationary 2nd order contributions. • Tests of Gaussianity: NG estimators and NG CMB maps • The CMB angular bispectrum • Predictions for the detectability of a NG signal in the CMB with WMAP and Planck

  3. CMB non-Gaussianity from inflation Primordial non-Gaussianity is usually parametrized as: Chi-squared non-Gaussian term Gaussian random field • fNL measures the expected level of non-Gaussianity • It is model dependent, e.g. : Standard single-field slow roll inflation: fNL~ 1 Multi-field inflation: fNL ≤ 100 • In Fourier space:

  4. From primordial perturbations toCMB anisotropies The CMB temperature fluctuations are related to the primordial potential through the radiation transfer functions primordial potential Radiation transfer function At linear level :F GaussianDT/T Gaussian

  5. From primordial perturbations toCMB anisotropies A rigorous treatment of CMB non-Gaussianity cannot use linear perturbation theory Non-Gaussianity in the CMB is the combination of two effects: primordial NG and second-order post inflationary evolution of perturbations. Pyne and Carroll (1992) second order correction radiative transfer F is the primordial gravitational potential at the end of inflation. This generally has a primordial NG contribution:

  6. The observed fNL is then given by: In single-field inflationfp is predicted to be very small: Acquaviva et al. (2004) Maldacena (2004) The dominant contribution to CMB non-Gaussianity, in this case, is then given by fF . For this reason we say that single field inflation gives fNL~ 1 fF~ 1 is only a rough estimate. A full second order treatment and second order transfer functions are required (Bartolo et al. 2006) In an accurate treatment fNL is no longer a constant. There is a momentum dependence

  7. Tests of Gaussianity Goal: putting quantitative constraints on fNL using CMB datasets 1. Apply the NG estimator to the measured CMB map 2. Compute the expected value of the estimator for several different fNL 3. Build a c2 statistic • Analytical predictions for the expected value of some estimators have been • obtained (Komatsu and Spergel 2001; Kogo and Komatsu 2006; • Chiaki, Komatsu and Matsubara 2006) • For most estimators such analytical predictions are impossible to get • Also when an analytical approach is possible, it is in general very difficult • to keep into account all the realistic experimental effects (noise, beam etc.) • Monte Carlo simulations of NG maps are necessary

  8. Non-Gaussian CMB maps • How to generate a non-Gaussian (NG) inflation-motivated CMB map ? • 1. Generate the Gaussian part of the primordial potential • 2. Square it in real space to get the non Gaussian part • 3. Convolve with the radiation transfer functions Problems Non-Gaussianity has a simple form in real space but we want to start from uncorrelated Gaussian r.v. We need a big simulation box (side = present cosmic horizon) We need a fine sampling to accurately resolve the thickness of the last scattering surface

  9. Non-Gaussian CMB maps From primordial potential to CMB multipoles Transfer functions in real space “Potential Multipoles” SW effect Late ISW effect Acoustic oscillations

  10. From Gaussian potential multipoles to non-Gaussian potential multipoles From white noise coefficients to Gaussian potential multipoles

  11. Liguori, Matarrese and Moscardini (2003)

  12. Applications Tests of Gaussianity on WMAP data using a set of 300 simulated NG maps. Wavelets + Curvature test fNL = - 5 ± 85 (1s c.l.) Cabella, M.L., et al. (2004)

  13. Primordial Bispectrum Standard fNL parametrization: all the relevant information is contained in the reduced bispectrum Angular bispectrum Averaged bispectrum Reduced bispectrum The reduced bispectrum can be obtained through a line of sight integral

  14. Komatsu and Spergel (2001)

  15. Primordial Bispectrum After computing the Bispectrum we can perform a Fisher analysis to estimate the expected signal-to-noise-ratio for a given experiment: Higher angular resolution More bispectrum modes Higher S/N The signal-to-noise ratio roughly grows as l Standard single-field inflation: fNL~ 1 Ideal experiment : fNL = 3

  16. Polarization Using a Bispectrum-based statistics and Minkowski functionals the WMAP team obtained the following constraint from the WMAP 3 years dataset: The analysis so far has only included temperature data. Polarization E-mode can be used to increase S/N by adding new Bispectrum modes: BTTT + BTTE + BTEE + BEEE Babich and Zaldarriaga (2004) estimated an improvement of afactor ~2 from polarization measurements NG polarization CMB maps are needed for the analysis. A preliminary set of 100 polarization maps at WMAP angular resolutions will be ready soon and allow a full temperature + polarization analysis (Yadav, M.L. et al. 2006, in preparation)

  17. Expexcted signal-to-noise ratio for NG for WMAP, Planck and an ideal experiment, including polarization in the analysis. Babich and Zaldarriaga (2004)

  18. Scale dependent fNL • Usual parametrization for primordial non-Gaussianity: fNL is constant • A full second order perturbative approach for single-field yields a • momentum-dependent fNL The momentum-dependent part accounts for the growth of non-Gaussianity due to post-inflationary non-linear evolution Model dependent (intrinsic NG) Model independent Post-inflationary evolution

  19. Scale dependent fNL In the full second order treatment the averaged bispectrum becomes: New l.o.s. integral Combination of 3j and 6j symbols Now the line of sight Integral has a different expression

  20. Previous terms (KS) + 5 corrections Liguori et al. (2005)

  21. Scale dependent fNL • We perform a Fisher analysis at WMAP angular resolution • Three scenarios: • Standard single-field inflation • Inhomogenous reheating • Curvaton • Standard single-field inflation • The signal is still undetectable at WMAP angular resolution • S/N grows faster than in the standard parametrization • If S/N keeps growing at lmax > 500 Planck could detect • non-Gaussianity arising from standard single-field inflation

  22. Planck detection treshold as calculated in Komatsu and Spergel (2001) fNL required in the standard parametrization in order to reproduce S/N obtained at a given lmax from the momentum-dependent parametrization Liguori et al. 2005

  23. Conclusions • CMB primordial non-Gaussianity is a powerful tool to make consistency tests • of inflationary models • The predicted non-Gaussianity from inflation is generally small: high angular • resolution experiments (WMAP, Planck) and optimized statistical tools are needed • We presented an algorithm able to produce NG maps atPlanck angular • resolution. NG maps are a fundamental tool to make tests of Gaussianity • Only temperature NG maps have been produced so far. We are extending the • present algorithms to include polarization in the analysis (present fNL bounds from • WMAP can be improved using polarization) • Using a bispectrum-based approach we complemented previous analyses for the • detectability of a primordial NG signal with WMAP and Planck to include • a scale-dependent fNL • Our results show that post-inflationary evolution of perturbations due to non-linear • gravitational effects has a significant impact on the observed level of NG

  24. CMB non-Gaussianity from inflation • CMB fluctuations are obtained by linear filtering the • primordial potential with the radiation transfer functions • If the primordial potential is Gaussian also the CMB • temperature anisotropies are Gaussian • Different inflationary models predict different levels of • non-Gaussianity in the primordial potential • Detection of non-Gaussianity in the CMB can be used as a test • to discriminate between different models of inflation! Caveats : i) the filtering is linear only at first order in the perturbations ii) foregrounds and experimental noise introduce NG in the data

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