Exploring cosmic origins with CORE: gravitational lensing of the CMB
Anthony Challinor, Rupert Allison, Julien Carron, Josquin Errard,, Stephen Feeney, Thomas Kitching, Julien Lesgourgues, Antony Lewis, \'I\~nigo, Zubeld\'ia, Ana Achucarro, Peter Ade, Mark Ashdown, Mario Ballardini, A. J., Banday, Ranajoy Banerji, James Bartlett, Nicola Bartolo

TL;DR
The CORE mission will significantly advance our understanding of the universe by providing high-precision CMB lensing maps, enabling precise neutrino mass measurements, improved primordial gravitational wave constraints, and detailed galaxy cluster calibration.
Contribution
This paper details the capabilities of the CORE mission to produce high-S/N CMB lensing maps and discusses its potential for groundbreaking cosmological measurements.
Findings
Lensing map will exceed current maps by a factor of 40 in S/N.
Neutrino mass will be measured with an accuracy of 17 meV.
Lensing delensing reduces B-mode power by 60-70%.
Abstract
Lensing of the CMB is now a well-developed probe of large-scale clustering over a broad range of redshifts. By exploiting the non-Gaussian imprints of lensing in the polarization of the CMB, the CORE mission can produce a clean map of the lensing deflections over nearly the full-sky. The number of high-S/N modes in this map will exceed current CMB lensing maps by a factor of 40, and the measurement will be sample-variance limited on all scales where linear theory is valid. Here, we summarise this mission product and discuss the science that it will enable. For example, the summed mass of neutrinos will be determined to an accuracy of 17 meV combining CORE lensing and CMB two-point information with contemporaneous BAO measurements, three times smaller than the minimum total mass allowed by neutrino oscillations. In the search for B-mode polarization from primordial gravitational waves…
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