Five-Year Wilkinson Microwave Anisotropy Probe (WMAP) Observations: Data Processing, Sky Maps, and Basic Results
G. Hinshaw, J. L. Weiland, R. S. Hill, N. Odegard, D. Larson, C. L., Bennett, J. Dunkley, B. Gold, M. R. Greason, N. Jarosik, E. Komatsu, M. R., Nolta, L. Page, D. N. Spergel, E. Wollack, M. Halpern, A. Kogut, M. Limon, S., S. Meyer, G. S. Tucker, E. L. Wright

TL;DR
This paper presents five-year WMAP data, including improved sky maps and systematic error tests, confirming the minimal LCDM model and refining cosmological parameters with high precision.
Contribution
It provides the most comprehensive five-year WMAP data release with enhanced data processing, systematic error analysis, and refined cosmological parameter constraints.
Findings
No deviations from the LCDM model detected.
WMAP data combined with other measurements tightly constrain cosmological parameters.
The tensor-to-scalar ratio limit is r < 0.22 at 95% CL.
Abstract
We present new full-sky temperature and polarization maps in five frequency bands from 23 to 94 GHz, based on data from the first five years of the WMAP sky survey. The five-year maps incorporate several improvements in data processing made possible by the additional years of data and by a more complete analysis of the instrument calibration and in-flight beam response. We present several new tests for systematic errors in the polarization data and conclude that Ka band data (33 GHz) is suitable for use in cosmological analysis, after foreground cleaning. This significantly reduces the overall polarization uncertainty. With the 5 year WMAP data, we detect no convincing deviations from the minimal 6-parameter LCDM model: a flat universe dominated by a cosmological constant, with adiabatic and nearly scale-invariant Gaussian fluctuations. Using WMAP data combined with measurements of Type…
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