Increasing evidence for hemispherical power asymmetry in the five-year WMAP data
J. Hoftuft, H. K. Eriksen, A. J. Banday, K. M. Gorski, F. K. Hansen,, P. B. Lilje

TL;DR
This study provides stronger evidence for hemispherical power asymmetry in the WMAP five-year data by analyzing higher resolution and computing the posterior distribution, confirming previous findings with increased significance.
Contribution
The paper extends previous analyses by doubling the angular resolution and computing the full posterior distribution, thereby strengthening the evidence for hemispherical power asymmetry in WMAP data.
Findings
Hemispherical power asymmetry detected at 3.3sigma significance.
Best-fit modulation amplitude A=0.072 +/- 0.022.
Bayesian evidence indicates strong support for anisotropy.
Abstract
(Abridged)Motivated by the recent results of Hansen et al. (2008) concerning a noticeable hemispherical power asymmetry in the WMAP data on small angular scales, we revisit the dipole modulated signal model introduced by Gordon et al. (2005). This model assumes that the true CMB signal consists of a Gaussian isotropic random field modulated by a dipole, and is characterized by an overall modulation amplitude, A, and a preferred direction, p. Previous analyses of this model has been restricted to very low resolution due to computational cost. In this paper, we double the angular resolution, and compute the full corresponding posterior distribution for the 5-year WMAP data. The results from our analysis are the following: The best-fit modulation amplitude for l <= 64 and the ILC data with the WMAP KQ85 sky cut is A=0.072 +/- 0.022, non-zero at 3.3sigma, and the preferred direction points…
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