Exploring Cosmic Origins with CORE: Inflation
CORE Collaboration: Fabio Finelli, Martin Bucher, Ana Ach\'ucarro,, Mario Ballardini, Nicola Bartolo, Daniel Baumann, S\'ebastien Clesse, Josquin, Errard, Will Handley, Mark Hindmarsh, Kimmo Kiiveri, Martin Kunz, Anthony, Lasenby, Michele Liguori, Daniela Paoletti

TL;DR
CORE is a proposed space mission designed to map the cosmic microwave background with high sensitivity and resolution, aiming to significantly advance our understanding of inflationary physics and early universe conditions.
Contribution
This study forecasts CORE's capabilities to improve constraints on inflationary parameters, primordial features, and early universe physics, highlighting its potential to transform cosmology.
Findings
Detects tensor-to-scalar ratio down to 10^{-3}
Constrains isocurvature perturbations to 10^{-3} level
Improves primordial non-Gaussianity measurements below f_NL^{local} < 1
Abstract
We forecast the scientific capabilities to improve our understanding of cosmic inflation of CORE, a proposed CMB space satellite submitted in response to the ESA fifth call for a medium-size mission opportunity. The CORE satellite will map the CMB anisotropies in temperature and polarization in 19 frequency channels spanning the range 60-600 GHz. CORE will have an aggregate noise sensitivity of Karcmin and an angular resolution of 5' at 200 GHz. We explore the impact of telescope size and noise sensitivity on the inflation science return by making forecasts for several instrumental configurations. This study assumes that the lower and higher frequency channels suffice to remove foreground contaminations and complements other related studies of component separation and systematic effects, which will be reported in other papers of the series "Exploring Cosmic Origins…
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