Precision Epoch of Reionization studies with next-generation CMB experiments
Erminia Calabrese, Ren\'ee Hlo\v{z}ek, Nick Battaglia, J. Richard, Bond, Francesco de Bernardis, Mark J. Devlin, Amir Hajian, Shawn Henderson,, J. Colin Hill, Arthur Kosowsky, Thibaut Louis, Jeff McMahon, Kavilan Moodley,, Laura Newburgh, Michael D. Niemack, Lyman A. Page

TL;DR
Next-generation CMB experiments with arcminute resolution can precisely measure reionization signatures and secondary anisotropies, enabling accurate cosmological parameter estimation and insights into the epoch of reionization.
Contribution
This paper demonstrates how combining small-scale polarization data with temperature measurements can improve constraints on reionization and secondary anisotropies.
Findings
Achieves better than 1% accuracy in primordial temperature spectrum prediction.
Detects the diffuse homogeneous kSZ signal at 15 sigma significance.
Bounds reionization timing and duration with high precision.
Abstract
Future arcminute resolution polarization data from ground-based Cosmic Microwave Background (CMB) observations can be used to estimate the contribution to the temperature power spectrum from the primary anisotropies and to uncover the signature of reionization near in the small angular-scale temperature measurements. Our projections are based on combining expected small-scale E-mode polarization measurements from Advanced ACTPol in the range with simulated temperature data from the full Planck mission in the low and intermediate region, . We show that the six basic cosmological parameters determined from this combination of data will predict the underlying primordial temperature spectrum at high multipoles to better than accuracy. Assuming an efficient cleaning from multi-frequency channels of most foregrounds in the temperature…
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