Planck intermediate results. XXX. The angular power spectrum of polarized dust emission at intermediate and high Galactic latitudes
Planck Collaboration: R. Adam, P. A. R. Ade, N. Aghanim, M. Arnaud, J., Aumont, C. Baccigalupi, A. J. Banday, R. B. Barreiro, J. G. Bartlett, N., Bartolo, E. Battaner, K. Benabed, A. Benoit-L\'evy, J.-P. Bernard, M., Bersanelli, P. Bielewicz, A. Bonaldi, L. Bonavera, J. R. Bond

TL;DR
This paper analyzes Planck polarization data to characterize Galactic dust emission, revealing its power spectrum, frequency dependence, and implications for CMB B-mode measurements, emphasizing dust contamination challenges.
Contribution
It provides the first detailed measurement of dust polarization power spectra at intermediate and high Galactic latitudes using Planck data, informing CMB foreground subtraction.
Findings
Dust polarization spectra follow a power law with exponent -2.42.
Dust polarization frequency dependence matches modified blackbody with β=1.59, T=19.6K.
Even in faint regions, dust contamination affects primordial B-mode detection.
Abstract
The polarized thermal emission from Galactic dust is the main foreground present in measurements of the polarization of the cosmic microwave background (CMB) at frequencies above 100GHz. We exploit the Planck HFI polarization data from 100 to 353GHz to measure the dust angular power spectra over the range well away from the Galactic plane. These will bring new insights into interstellar dust physics and a precise determination of the level of contamination for CMB polarization experiments. We show that statistical properties of the emission can be characterized over large fractions of the sky using . For the dust, they are well described by power laws in with exponents . The amplitudes of the polarization vary with the average brightness in a way similar to the intensity ones. The dust polarization…
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.
