Archive for Atacama Cosmology Telescope

New Results from the Atacama Cosmology Telescope

Posted in The Universe and Stuff with tags , , , , , , on April 12, 2023 by telescoper

I wish to draw your attention to a clutch of new papers out on the arXiv today (here, here and here) which describe latest results from the Atacama Cosmology Telescope (ACT for short). There was a webinar about this yesterday, which I failed to attend because I forgot about it.

The first of the papers listed above summarizes the key science results, which include a mass map obtained from gravitational lensing of the cosmic microwave background and its implications for cosmology.

As cosmic background photons propagate freely through space, i.e. without scattering, from the time of recombination to the observer, they are deflected by the gravitational effect of the large-scale distribution of matter in the Universe. This lensing effect leaves imprints in the temperature and polarization anisotropies, which can be used to reconstruct a map of the lensing potential, the gradient of which determines the lensing deflections. Structures in the CMB temperature pattern look bigger on the sky if we view them through an overdense clump of dark matter. By looking how the typical size of hot and cold spots in the CMB temperature map vary across the sky, it is possible to reconstruct the lensing deflections and hence the distribution of dark matter integrated along the line of sight. Since the structure through which the radiation passes is changing with time, this sort of map can provide constraints on models for the evolution of structure.

To cut a long story short, here is the map obtained using Data Release 6 of the ACT data over about 25% of the sky:

There’s a lot of information in the three papers but the key conclusion can be found in the last sentence of the abstract of the first paper:

Our results provide independent confirmation that the universe is spatially flat, conforms with general relativity, and is described remarkably well by the ΛCDM model, while paving a promising path for neutrino physics with gravitational lensing from upcoming ground-based CMB surveys.

Nothing revolutionary, then, but interesting nevertheless. There is an article on the BBC website about these results.

New Results from the Atacama Cosmology Telescope!

Posted in The Universe and Stuff with tags , , , , on July 16, 2020 by telescoper

There’s some excitement in cosmological circles with the announcement of new results from the Atacama Cosmology Telescope, which is situated in the Atacama Desert in Chile. The two papers describing the new results can be found on the arXiv here and here and the data set will be made available here (it is Data Release 4; or DR4 for short).

If you want a laugh, the structure in the above map is on arc-minute scales – exactly the sort of thing I was trying to simulate way back in the 1980s. Here’s an ancient monochrome plot! The contours show 1σ, 2σ and 3σ fluctuations above the mean rather than the full distribution shown in the map above.

The full results will be discussed at a Zoom presentation at 11am Eastern Time (4pm Irish Time). I suspect it will be very busy so you will have to register in advance.

UPDATE: The Webinar is over but was recorded. I will post a link to the video when it is available. You can then guess which question was mine!

The new results from ACTPol are consistent with those from Planck, even down to the colour scheme used for the map, but the line taken by most media presentations I’ve seen (e.g. here and here) has been the issue of the Hubble Constant. The value of around 67.6 km s-1 Mpc-1 obtained by the Atacama Cosmology Telescope, though consistent with Planck measurements, is lower than most distance-scale measurements of H0. The dichotomy between `low’ estimates from cosmological observations and `high’ values persists.

This gives me an excuse to include my poll again:

There have been nearly a thousand responses so far, with opinion very divided.

The burning question however is when will face masks featuring the above map be made available for purchase? It could be a nice little earner…

Cosmology Talks: Omar Darwish on Lensing Maps

Posted in The Universe and Stuff with tags , , , , , on April 17, 2020 by telescoper

If you are missing your regular seminar experience because of the Coronavirus lockdown, Shaun Hotchkiss has set up a YouTube channel just for you!

The channel features technical talks rather than popular expositions so it won’t be everyone’s cup of tea but for those seriously interested in cosmology at a research level they should prove interesting.

Here’s another example from that series in which Omar Darwish talks about CMB Lensing Maps and specifically about an extremely impressive example thereof which he made using data from the Atacama Cosmology Telescope.