Possible detection of the M31 rotation in WMAP data
F. De Paolis, V.G. Gurzadyan, G. Ingrosso, Ph. Jetzer, A.A. Nucita, A., Qadir, D. Vetrugno, A.L. Kashin, H.G. Khachatryan, S. Mirzoyan

TL;DR
This study analyzes WMAP data to detect temperature asymmetries in M31's disk and halo, suggesting a possible link to the galaxy's rotation, which could open new avenues for studying galactic structures with CMB data.
Contribution
First detection of microwave temperature asymmetries in M31's disk and halo potentially related to its rotation using WMAP data.
Findings
Robust temperature asymmetry detected in M31 disk up to 130 microK.
Weaker temperature asymmetry observed in M31 halo up to 40 microK.
Temperature asymmetry aligns with the galaxy's rotation direction.
Abstract
Data on the cosmic microwave background (CMB) radiation by the Wilkinson Microwave Anisotropy Probe (WMAP) had a profound impact on the understanding of a variety of physical processes in the early phases of the Universe and on the estimation of the cosmological parameters. Here, the 7-year WMAP data are used to trace the disk and the halo of the nearby giant spiral galaxy M31. We analyzed the temperature excess in three WMAP bands (W, V, and Q) by dividing the region of the sky around M31 into several concentric circular areas. We studied the robustness of the detected temperature excess by considering 500 random control fields in the real WMAP maps and simulating 500 sky maps from the best-fitted cosmological parameters. By comparing the obtained temperature contrast profiles with the real ones towards the M31 galaxy, we find that the temperature asymmetry in the M31 disk is fairly…
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