A measurement of secondary cosmic microwave background anisotropies with two years of South Pole Telescope observations
C. L. Reichardt, L. Shaw, O. Zahn, 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

TL;DR
This paper presents detailed measurements of secondary anisotropies in the cosmic microwave background using South Pole Telescope data, constraining cosmological parameters and foreground effects across multiple frequencies.
Contribution
First three-frequency CMB power spectra from SPT covering small angular scales, with combined analysis of SZ effects, CIB, and cosmological implications including sigma8 estimation.
Findings
Measured thermal SZ power at 150 GHz and ell=3000 as 3.65 +/- 0.69 muK^2.
Set an upper limit on kinetic SZ power at less than 2.8 muK^2.
Constrained sigma8 to be 0.807 +/- 0.016.
Abstract
We present the first three-frequency South Pole Telescope (SPT) cosmic microwave background (CMB) power spectra. The band powers presented here cover angular scales 2000 < ell < 9400 in frequency bands centered at 95, 150, and 220 GHz. At these frequencies and angular scales, a combination of the primary CMB anisotropy, thermal and kinetic Sunyaev-Zel'dovich (SZ) effects, radio galaxies, and cosmic infrared background (CIB) contributes to the signal. We combine Planck and SPT data at 220 GHz to constrain the amplitude and shape of the CIB power spectrum and find strong evidence for non-linear clustering. We explore the SZ results using a variety of cosmological models for the CMB and CIB anisotropies and find them to be robust with one exception: allowing for spatial correlations between the thermal SZ effect and CIB significantly degrades the SZ constraints. Neglecting this potential…
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