Interplay of CMB Temperature, Space Curvature, and Expansion Rate Parameters
Meir Shimon, Yoel Rephaeli

TL;DR
This study uses recent cosmological data to precisely infer the CMB temperature at recombination and explores its correlations with the Hubble constant and spatial curvature, revealing potential tensions with local measurements.
Contribution
It provides the first precise inference of the recombination temperature using combined datasets and investigates its relationship with H0 and curvature, highlighting possible inconsistencies.
Findings
Imposes a 1% precision constraint on T at recombination.
Finds tension between local H0 measurements and CMB-inferred T in flat universe.
Suggests higher T at recombination than expected if space is flat.
Abstract
The cosmic microwave background (CMB) temperature, , surely the most precisely measured cosmological parameter, has been inferred from {\it local} measurements of the blackbody spectrum to an exquisite precision of 1 part in . On the other hand, current precision allows inference of other basic cosmological parameters at the level from CMB power spectra, galaxy correlation and lensing, luminosity distance measurements of supernovae, as well as other cosmological probes. A basic consistency check of the standard cosmological model is an independent inference of at recombination. In this work we first use the recent Planck data, supplemented by either the first year data release of the dark energy survey (DES), baryon acoustic oscillations (BAO) data, and the Pantheon SNIa catalog, to extract at the precision level. We then explore correlations…
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.
