Extragalactic Compact Sources in the Planck Sky and their Cosmological Implications
Luigi Toffolatti, Carlo Burigana, Francisco Argueso, Jose M. Diego

TL;DR
The paper reviews Planck satellite results on extragalactic compact sources, including galaxy clusters and point sources, highlighting detection methods, spectral properties, and implications for cosmology and galaxy evolution.
Contribution
It presents new detection techniques, catalogs, and analysis of extragalactic sources from Planck data, advancing understanding of their properties and cosmological significance.
Findings
Detection of ~200 galaxy clusters via SZ effect
Spectral index steepening above 70 GHz in radio sources
Evidence of colder dust (T < 20 K) in nearby dusty galaxies
Abstract
The Planck satellite has proved to be a very successful mission, which has been operating flawlessly for more than 36 months. Its main purpose is to map the anisotropies of the CMB radiation at 9 frequencies, between 30 and 857 GHz, with unprecedented resolution and sensitivity. After a description of the properties and cosmological aims of Planck, we review the results obtained during the first 1.6 full sky surveys relative to compact extragalactic sources and their implications. The most recent and efficient methods and filters for compact source detection in the presence of Gaussian noise and CMB anisotropies are discussed. The first surveys of Planck have enabled the detection of about 200 galaxy clusters, by the SZ effect, and from several hundreds to many thousands of extragalactic point sources (EPS), presented in the Planck ERCSC. We review the results on the SZ effect in galaxy…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
Taxonomy
TopicsRadio Astronomy Observations and Technology · Astrophysics and Cosmic Phenomena · Galaxies: Formation, Evolution, Phenomena
