A Measurement of the Cosmic Microwave Background Damping Tail from the 2500-square-degree SPT-SZ survey
K. T. Story, C. L. Reichardt, Z. Hou, R. Keisler, 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, B. Follin, E. M. George, N., W. Halverson, G. P. Holder, W. L. Holzapfel

TL;DR
This paper presents precise measurements of the CMB damping tail from the SPT-SZ survey, improving cosmological parameter constraints and detecting gravitational lensing with high significance.
Contribution
First measurement of the CMB damping tail from the SPT-SZ survey covering 2540 deg$^2$, enhancing constraints on cosmological parameters and lensing.
Findings
Gravitational lensing detected at 8.1 sigma significance.
Tightened constraints on $ heta_s$ by a factor of 2.7.
Detected a 3.9 sigma preference for $n_s<1$.
Abstract
We present a measurement of the cosmic microwave background (CMB) temperature power spectrum using data from the recently completed South Pole Telescope Sunyaev-Zel'dovich (SPT-SZ) survey. This measurement is made from observations of 2540 deg of sky with arcminute resolution at GHz, and improves upon previous measurements using the SPT by tripling the sky area. We report CMB temperature anisotropy power over the multipole range . We fit the SPT bandpowers, combined with the seven-year Wilkinson Microwave Anisotropy Probe (WMAP7) data, with a six-parameter LCDM cosmological model and find that the two datasets are consistent and well fit by the model. Adding SPT measurements significantly improves LCDM parameter constraints; in particular, the constraint on tightens by a factor of 2.7. The impact of gravitational lensing is detected at $8.1\,…
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