Publication: BICEP2/Keck Array VIII: Measurement of Gravitational Lensing from Large-scale B-Mode Polarization.
Open/View Files
Date
2016
Published Version
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
American Astronomical Society
The Harvard community has made this article openly available. Please share how this access benefits you.
Citation
Ade, P. A. R., Z. Ahmed, R. W. Aikin, K. D. Alexander, D. Barkats, S. J. Benton, C. A. Bischoff, et al. 2016. “BICEP2/Keck Array VIII: Measurement of Gravitational Lensing from Large-scale B-Mode Polarization." The Astrophysical Journal 833 (2) (December 19): 228. doi:10.3847/1538-4357/833/2/228.
Research Data
Abstract
We present measurements of polarization lensing using the 150 GHz maps, which include all data taken by the BICEP2 and Keck Array Cosmic Microwave Background polarization experiments up to and including the 2014 observing season (BK14). Despite their modest angular resolution ($\sim 0\buildrel{\circ}\over{.} 5$), the excellent sensitivity (~3μK-arcmin) of these maps makes it possible to directly reconstruct the lensing potential using only information at larger angular scales (${\ell }\leqslant 700$). From the auto-spectrum of the reconstructed potential, we measure an amplitude of the spectrum to be ${A}_{{\rm{L}}}^{\phi \phi }=1.15\pm 0.36$ (Planck ΛCDM prediction corresponds to ${A}_{{\rm{L}}}^{\phi \phi }=1$) and reject the no-lensing hypothesis at $5.8\sigma $, which is the highest significance achieved to date using an EB lensing estimator. Taking the cross-spectrum of the reconstructed potential with the Planck 2015 lensing map yields ${A}_{{\rm{L}}}^{\phi \phi }=1.13\pm 0.20$. These direct measurements of ${A}_{{\rm{L}}}^{\phi \phi }$ are consistent with the ΛCDM cosmology and with that derived from the previously reported BK14 B-mode auto-spectrum (${A}_{{\rm{L}}}^{\mathrm{BB}}=1.20\pm 0.17$). We perform a series of null tests and consistency checks to show that these results are robust against systematics and are insensitive to analysis choices. These results unambiguously demonstrate that the B modes previously reported by BICEP/Keck at intermediate angular scales ($150\lesssim {\ell }\lesssim 350$) are dominated by gravitational lensing. The good agreement between the lensing amplitudes obtained from the lensing reconstruction and B-mode spectrum starts to place constraints on any alternative cosmological sources of B modes at these angular scales.
Description
Other Available Sources
Keywords
cosmic background radiation, cosmology: observations, gravitational lensing: weak, polarization
Terms of Use
This article is made available under the terms and conditions applicable to Open Access Policy Articles (OAP), as set forth at Terms of Service