Detecting chiral gravity with the pure pseudospectrum reconstruction of the cosmic microwave background polarized anisotropies
A. Ferte, J. Grain

TL;DR
This paper investigates the potential to detect parity violation in gravity through polarized cosmic microwave background anisotropies, focusing on TB and EB correlations, and assesses the capabilities of current and future experiments.
Contribution
It introduces a method to constrain parity violation in gravity using pseudospectrum reconstruction of CMB polarization, including effects of lensing and calibration uncertainties.
Findings
Detection of chiral gravity is unlikely with current small-scale experiments.
A future satellite mission could detect at least 50% parity asymmetry at 68% confidence.
Non-detection constrains parity violation to less than 39% at 95% confidence.
Abstract
We consider the possible detection of parity violation at the linear level in gravity using polarized anisotropies of the cosmic microwave background. Since such a parity violation would lead to non-zero TB and EB correlations, this makes those odd-parity angular power spectra a potential probe of parity violation in the gravitational sector. These spectra are modeled incorporating the impact of lensing and we explore their possible detection in the context of small-scale (balloon-borne or ground-based) experiments and a future satellite mission dedicated to B-mode detection. We assess the statistical uncertainties on their reconstruction using mode-counting and a (more realistic) pure pseudospectrum estimator approach. Those uncertainties are then translated into constraints on the level of parity asymmetry. We found that detecting chiral gravity is impossible for ongoing small-scale…
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