Planck CMB Anomalies: Astrophysical and Cosmological Secondary Effects and the Curse of Masking
A. Rassat, J.-L. Starck, P. Paykari, F. Sureau, J. Bobin

TL;DR
This paper investigates large-scale anomalies in CMB data, analyzing the impact of masking, secondary astrophysical effects, and cosmological signals, and introduces new methods to improve the study of these anomalies using combined WMAP and Planck data.
Contribution
The study presents new procedures using sparsity-based LGMCA maps to reduce masking effects and assesses the significance of CMB anomalies after accounting for secondary effects.
Findings
Masking effects dominate over residual foregrounds in CMB analysis.
Most anomalies are not statistically significant after secondary effect subtraction.
Only the low quadrupole remains potentially anomalous after corrections.
Abstract
Large-scale anomalies have been reported in CMB data with both WMAP and Planck data. These could be due to foreground residuals and or systematic effects, though their confirmation with Planck data suggests they are not due to a problem in the WMAP or Planck pipelines. If these anomalies are in fact primordial, then understanding their origin is fundamental to either validate the standard model of cosmology or to explore new physics. We investigate three other possible issues: 1) the trade-off between minimising systematics due to foreground contamination (with a conservative mask) and minimising systematics due to masking, 2) astrophysical secondary effects (the kinetic Doppler quadrupole and kinetic Sunyaev-Zel'dovich effect), and 3) secondary cosmological signals (the integrated Sachs-Wolfe effect). We address the masking issue by considering new procedures that use both WMAP and…
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Taxonomy
TopicsCosmology and Gravitation Theories
