Measuring the Integrated Sachs-Wolfe Effect
F.-X. Dupe, A. Rassat, J.-L. Starck, M. J. Fadili

TL;DR
This paper introduces a novel, model-independent method using sparse inpainting and bootstrap techniques to detect and measure the ISW effect, improving robustness against missing data and statistical assumptions, with promising results on simulations and real data.
Contribution
The paper presents a new method for ISW detection that requires minimal assumptions and effectively handles missing data, advancing current analysis techniques.
Findings
Expected 7 detection with WMAP7-like data
Detection levels of 4.7 with Euclid-like survey
Successful application to 2MASS and WMAP7 data
Abstract
One of the main challenges of modern cosmology is to understand the nature of dark energy. The Integrated Sachs-Wolfe (ISW) effect is sensitive to dark energy and presents an independent signature of dark energy in the absence of modified gravity and curvature. The ISW effect occurs on large scales, where cosmic variance is high and where there are large amounts of missing data in the CMB and large scale structure maps due to Galactic confusion. Moreover, existing methods in the literature often make strong assumptions about the statistics of the underlying fields or estimators. Together these effects can severely limit signal extraction. We review literature on the ISW effect, comparing statistical subtleties between existing methods, and identifying several limitations. We propose a novel method to detect and measure the ISW signal. This method assumes only that the primordial CMB…
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