A Measurement of the Damping Tail of the Cosmic Microwave Background Power Spectrum with the South Pole Telescope
R. Keisler, C. L. Reichardt, K. A. Aird, B. A. Benson, L. E. Bleem, J., E. Carlstrom, C. L. Chang, H. M. Cho, T. M. Crawford, A. T. Crites, T. de, Haan, M. A. Dobbs, J. Dudley, E. M. George, N. W. Halverson, G. P. Holder, W., L. Holzapfel, S. Hoover, Z. Hou, J. D. Hrubes, M. Joy

TL;DR
This paper presents precise measurements of the CMB power spectrum from the South Pole Telescope, confirming the LCDM model, detecting gravitational lensing, and constraining cosmological parameters including helium abundance and neutrino effects.
Contribution
First measurement of the CMB damping tail with SPT data combined with WMAP, providing new constraints on cosmological parameters and extensions beyond LCDM.
Findings
Detection of gravitational lensing at ~5 sigma significance
Constraints on the spectral index ns = 0.9663 +/- 0.0112
Strong evidence for primordial helium and neutrinos effects
Abstract
We present a measurement of the angular power spectrum of the cosmic microwave background (CMB) using data from the South Pole Telescope (SPT). The data consist of 790 square degrees of sky observed at 150 GHz during 2008 and 2009. Here we present the power spectrum over the multipole range 650 < ell < 3000, where it is dominated by primary CMB anisotropy. We combine this power spectrum with the power spectra from the seven-year Wilkinson Microwave Anisotropy Probe (WMAP) data release to constrain cosmological models. We find that the SPT and WMAP data are consistent with each other and, when combined, are well fit by a spatially flat, LCDM cosmological model. The SPT+WMAP constraint on the spectral index of scalar fluctuations is ns = 0.9663 +/- 0.0112. We detect, at ~5-sigma significance, the effect of gravitational lensing on the CMB power spectrum, and find its amplitude to be…
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