Limits of the circles-in-the-sky searches in the determination of cosmic topology of nearly flat universes
G.I. Gomero, B. Mota, M.J. Reboucas

TL;DR
This paper demonstrates that current circles-in-the-sky searches may miss certain nearly flat universes with nontrivial topology, as such universes can produce circle parameters outside the searched ranges, leaving the topology undetected.
Contribution
It derives expressions showing that nearly flat universes can have detectable topologies with circle parameters outside current search ranges, highlighting limitations of existing methods.
Findings
No matching circles found in current searches.
Nearly flat universes can produce circles outside searched parameter ranges.
Current searches are insufficient to rule out nontrivial cosmic topology.
Abstract
[Abridged] An observable signature of a detectable nontrivial spatial topology of the Universe is the circles-in-the-sky in the CMB sky. In the most general search, pairs of circles with deviation from antipodality and radii were investigated, but no matching circles were found. Assuming this negative result, we examine the question as to whether there are nearly flat universes with compact topology that would give rise to circles whose observable parameters and fall o outside the ranges covered by this search. We derive the expressions for the deviation from antipodality and for the radius of the circles associated to a pair elements (,) of the holonomy group which define the spatial section of any positively curved universe with a nontrivial topology. We show…
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