Primordial Gravitational Waves Measurements and Anisotropies of CMB Polarization Rotation
Si-Yu Li, Jun-Qing Xia, Mingzhe Li, Hong Li, Xinmin Zhang

TL;DR
This paper investigates how cosmic birefringence, caused by CPT-violating interactions, can mimic primordial gravitational wave signals in CMB polarization, emphasizing the importance of accounting for polarization rotation anisotropies for accurate measurements.
Contribution
It introduces a comprehensive analysis of polarization rotation anisotropies' impact on constraining primordial gravitational waves using current and simulated CMB data.
Findings
Including anisotropies weakens constraints on tensor-to-scalar ratio r.
Neglecting anisotropies can bias the estimation of r.
Properly modeling anisotropies is crucial for accurate primordial gravitational wave detection.
Abstract
Searching for the signal of primordial gravitational waves in the B-modes (BB) power spectrum is one of the key scientific aims of the cosmic microwave background (CMB) polarization experiments. However, this could be easily contaminated by several foreground issues, such as the thermal dust emission. In this paper we study another mechanism, the cosmic birefringence, which can be introduced by a CPT-violating interaction between CMB photons and an external scalar field. Such kind of interaction could give rise to the rotation of the linear polarization state of CMB photons, and consequently induce the CMB BB power spectrum, which could mimic the signal of primordial gravitational waves at large scales. With the recent polarization data of BICEP2 and the joint analysis data of BICEP2/Keck Array and Planck, we perform a global fitting analysis on constraining the tensor-to-scalar ratio…
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