TL;DR
This paper develops a new formalism to constrain small-scale baryon and dark matter isocurvature perturbations using CMB anisotropies, providing the first tight bounds on their initial amplitudes and forecasting future detection capabilities.
Contribution
The paper introduces a versatile formalism to analyze small-scale baryon and dark matter isocurvature modes and applies it to Planck data to set new upper limits.
Findings
Planck data shows no evidence for small-scale isocurvature perturbations.
Upper bounds on initial power spectrum are established for various modes.
Future CMB Stage-4 experiments could significantly improve these constraints.
Abstract
The Universe's initial conditions, in particular baryon and cold dark matter (CDM) isocurvature perturbations, are poorly constrained on sub-Mpc scales. In this paper, we develop a new formalism to compute the effect of small-scale baryon perturbations on the mean free-electron abundance, thus on cosmic microwave background (CMB) anisotropies. Our framework can accommodate perturbations with arbitrary time and scale dependence. We apply this formalism to four different combinations of baryon and CDM isocurvature modes, and use Planck CMB-anisotropy data to probe their initial amplitude. We find that Planck data is consistent with no small-scale isocurvature perturbations, and that this additional ingredient does not help alleviate the Hubble tension. We set upper bounds to the dimensionless initial power spectrum of these isocurvature modes at comoving…
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