Euclid preparation XLVI. The Near-IR Background Dipole Experiment with Euclid
Euclid Collaboration: A. Kashlinsky (1, 2, 3), R. G. Arendt (4, and 1, 5), M. L. N. Ashby (6), F. Atrio-Barandela (7), R. Scaramella (8, and 9), M. A. Strauss (10), B. Altieri (11), A. Amara (12), S. Andreon (13),, N. Auricchio (14), M. Baldi (15, 14, 16), S. Bardelli (14)

TL;DR
This paper proposes a method to measure the cosmic infrared background dipole using Euclid data, aiming to test the kinematic nature of the CMB dipole and explore preinflationary spacetime structures.
Contribution
It develops a detailed methodology for Euclid's Wide Survey to isolate the CIB dipole, including systematic uncertainty mitigation and star-galaxy separation techniques.
Findings
Method achieves sub-degree accuracy in CIB dipole direction
Systematic uncertainties are effectively minimized
Sample selection reduces galaxy clustering effects
Abstract
Verifying the fully kinematic nature of the cosmic microwave background (CMB) dipole is of fundamental importance in cosmology. In the standard cosmological model with the Friedman-Lemaitre-Robertson-Walker (FLRW) metric from the inflationary expansion the CMB dipole should be entirely kinematic. Any non-kinematic CMB dipole component would thus reflect the preinflationary structure of spacetime probing the extent of the FLRW applicability. Cosmic backgrounds from galaxies after the matter-radiation decoupling, should have kinematic dipole component identical in velocity with the CMB kinematic dipole. Comparing the two can lead to isolating the CMB non-kinematic dipole. It was recently proposed that such measurement can be done using the near-IR cosmic infrared background (CIB) measured with the currently operating Euclid telescope, and later with Roman. The proposed method reconstructs…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAstronomy and Astrophysical Research · Spaceflight effects on biology
