Probing the statistical isotropy of the universe with Planck data of the cosmic microwave background
C.E. Kester, A. Bernui, and W.S. Hip\'olito-Ricaldi

TL;DR
This study analyzes Planck CMB data to investigate the universe's statistical isotropy, confirming a significant north-south asymmetry and a preferred axis inconsistent with standard cosmological models.
Contribution
It provides a model-independent, robust detection of the north-south asymmetry in CMB temperature correlations across four Planck maps, reinforcing previous findings.
Findings
Confirmed a preferred axis at (l,b) ≈ (260°, 130°) with 98-99% confidence
Detected significant north-south asymmetry in CMB temperature correlations
Validated the robustness of results against foregrounds and noise
Abstract
We study the angular distribution of temperature fluctuations in the cosmic microwave background (CMB) to probe the statistical isotropy of the universe by using precise full-sky CMB data with a model-independent approach. We investigated the temperature-temperature angular correlations in the four Planck foreground-cleaned CMB maps that were released recently. We performed a directional analysis on the CMB sphere to search directions in which the temperature-temperature angular correlations are extreme. Our analyses confirm a preferred axis in the CMB sphere, pointing in the direction , at the confidence level. In this direction, the CMB angular correlations exceed the antipodal direction most strongly. This preferred direction is unexpected in the CDM cosmological model and represents a significant deviation from results…
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Taxonomy
TopicsCosmology and Gravitation Theories · Relativity and Gravitational Theory · Statistical and numerical algorithms
