Measurements of the E-Mode Polarization and Temperature-E-Mode Correlation of the CMB from SPT-3G 2018 Data
D. Dutcher, L. Balkenhol, P. A. R. Ade, Z. Ahmed, E. Anderes, A. J., Anderson, M. Archipley, J. S. Avva, K. Aylor, P. S. Barry, R. Basu Thakur, K., Benabed, A. N. Bender, B. A. Benson, F. Bianchini, L. E. Bleem, F. R., Bouchet, L. Bryant, K. Byrum, J. E. Carlstrom, F. W. Carter

TL;DR
This paper presents detailed measurements of the E-mode polarization and temperature-E-mode correlation of the CMB using SPT-3G data, refining cosmological parameters and confirming consistency with the ΛCDM model.
Contribution
First detailed polarization measurements from SPT-3G, improving constraints on cosmological parameters and demonstrating consistency with Planck and previous experiments.
Findings
Measured EE and TE power spectra over multipole range 300-3000.
Constraints on H0 and σ8 consistent with ΛCDM and other experiments.
Reduced the parameter space volume when combined with Planck data.
Abstract
We present measurements of the -mode () polarization power spectrum and temperature--mode () cross-power spectrum of the cosmic microwave background using data collected by SPT-3G, the latest instrument installed on the South Pole Telescope. This analysis uses observations of a 1500 deg region at 95, 150, and 220 GHz taken over a four month period in 2018. We report binned values of the and power spectra over the angular multipole range , using the multifrequency data to construct six semi-independent estimates of each power spectrum and their minimum-variance combination. These measurements improve upon the previous results of SPTpol across the multipole ranges for and for , resulting in constraints on cosmological parameters comparable to those from other current leading…
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.
Code & Models
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
