Isotropy statistics of CMB hot and cold spots
Md Ishaque Khan, Rajib Saha

TL;DR
This study uses orientation matrix-based statistics to analyze the uniformity of hot and cold spots in the CMB, finding a generally uniform distribution with some anomalies linked to low multipole contributions.
Contribution
Introduces a novel application of orientation matrix estimators to assess isotropy of CMB spots, providing new insights into large-scale uniformity and anomalies.
Findings
Hot spots are uniformly distributed over the sky.
Cold spots show anomalously low non-uniformity strength.
Anomalies may relate to low multipole contributions like quadrupole and octupole.
Abstract
Statistical Isotropy of the Cosmic Microwave Background (CMB) radiation has been studied and debated extensively in recent years. Under this assumption, the hot spots and cold spots of the CMB are expected to be uniformly distributed over a 2-sphere. We use the orientation matrix, first proposed by Watson (1965) and Scheidegger (1965) and associated shape and strength parameters (Woodcock, 1977) to analyse whether the hot and cold spots of the observed CMB temperature anisotropy field are uniformly placed. We demonstrate the usefulness of our estimators by using simulated toy models containing non-uniform data. We apply our method on several foreground minimized CMB maps observed by WMAP and Planck over large angular scales. The shape and strength parameters constrain geometric features of possible deviations from uniformity (isotropy) and the power of the anomalous signal. We find that…
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