Bibcode
Planck Collaboration; Ade, P. A. R.; Aghanim, N.; Arnaud, M.; Ashdown, M.; Aumont, J.; Baccigalupi, C.; Banday, A. J.; Barreiro, R. B.; Bartolo, N.; Basak, S.; Battaner, E.; Benabed, K.; Benoît, A.; Benoit-Lévy, A.; Bernard, J.-P.; Bersanelli, M.; Bielewicz, P.; Bock, J. J.; Bonaldi, A.; Bonavera, L.; Bond, J. R.; Borrill, J.; Bouchet, F. R.; Bucher, M.; Burigana, C.; Butler, R. C.; Calabrese, E.; Cardoso, J.-F.; Catalano, A.; Challinor, A.; Chamballu, A.; Chiang, H. C.; Christensen, P. R.; Church, S.; Clements, D. L.; Colombi, S.; Colombo, L. P. L.; Combet, C.; Couchot, F.; Coulais, A.; Crill, B. P.; Curto, A.; Cuttaia, F.; Danese, L.; Davies, R. D.; Davis, R. J.; de Bernardis, P.; de Rosa, A.; de Zotti, G.; Delabrouille, J.; Désert, F.-X.; Diego, J. M.; Dole, H.; Donzelli, S.; Doré, O.; Douspis, M.; Ducout, A.; Dupac, X.; Efstathiou, G.; Elsner, F.; Enßlin, T. A.; Eriksen, H. K.; Feeney, S.; Fergusson, J.; Finelli, F.; Forni, O.; Frailis, M.; Fraisse, A. A.; Franceschi, E.; Frejsel, A.; Galeotta, S.; Galli, S.; Ganga, K.; Giard, M.; Giraud-Héraud, Y.; Gjerløw, E.; González-Nuevo, J.; Górski, K. M.; Gratton, S.; Gregorio, A.; Gruppuso, A.; Gudmundsson, J. E.; Hansen, F. K.; Hanson, D.; Harrison, D. L.; Henrot-Versillé, S.; Hernández-Monteagudo, C.; Herranz, D.; Hildebrandt, S. R.; Hivon, E.; Hobson, M.; Holmes, W. A.; Hornstrup, A.; Hovest, W.; Huffenberger, K. M.; Hurier, G.; Jaffe, A. H.; Jaffe, T. R.; Jones, W. C. et al.
Bibliographical reference
Astronomy and Astrophysics, Volume 594, id.A18, 21 pp.
Advertised on:
9
2016
Journal
Citations
95
Refereed citations
82
Description
Maps of cosmic microwave background (CMB) temperature and polarization
from the 2015 release of Planck data provide the highestquality full-sky
view of the surface of last scattering available to date. This enables
us to detect possible departures from a globally isotropic cosmology. We
present the first searches using CMB polarization for correlations
induced by a possible non-trivial topology with a fundamental domain
that intersects, or nearly intersects, the last-scattering surface (at
comoving distance χrec), both via a direct scan for
matched circular patterns at the intersections and by an optimal
likelihood calculation for specific topologies. We specialize to flat
spaces with cubic toroidal (T3) and slab (T1) topologies, finding that
explicit searches for the latter are sensitive to other topologies with
antipodal symmetry. These searches yield no detection of a compact
topology with a scale below the diameter of the last-scattering surface.
The limits on the radius ℛi of the largest sphere
inscribed in the fundamental domain (at log-likelihood ratio
Δlnℒ > -5 relative to a simply-connected flat Planck
best-fit model) are: ℛi > 0.97 χrec
for the T3 cubic torus; and ℛi > 0.56
χrec for the T1 slab. The limit for the T3 cubic torus
from the matched-circles search is numerically equivalent,
ℛi > 0.97 χrec at 99% confidence
level from polarization data alone. We also perform a Bayesian search
for an anisotropic global Bianchi VIIh geometry. In the
non-physical setting, where the Bianchi cosmology is decoupled from the
standard cosmology, Planck temperature data favour the inclusion of a
Bianchi component with a Bayes factor of at least 2.3 units of
log-evidence. However, the cosmological parameters that generate this
pattern are in strong disagreement with those found from CMB anisotropy
data alone. Fitting the induced polarization pattern for this model to
the Planck data requires an amplitude of -0.10 ± 0.04 compared to
the value of + 1 if the model were to be correct. In the physically
motivated setting, where the Bianchi parameters are coupled and fitted
simultaneously with the standard cosmological parameters, we find no
evidence for a Bianchi VIIh cosmology and constrain the
vorticity of such models to (ω/H)0 < 7.6 ×
10-10 (95% CL).