On scales larger than few arcminutes, the millimeter sky is dominated by CMB temperature fluctuations. A significant fraction of these CMB photons encode a wealth of information about its interaction with the local matter distribution (eg lensing, SZ, ISW or Rees-Sciama effects). On smaller scales, the millimeter sky is dominated by high redshift star forming galaxies (see talk by D.H.Hughes). All this provides a complementary tool to optical/IR view of the universe Simulations of the millimeter sky Alpha Durham May 21, 2004 E.Gaztañaga I nstitut d'Estudis Espacials de Catalunya, IEEC/CSIC Alfredo Montana, Msc. INAOE INAOE - Barcelona Durham - Barcelona (Alfa, RAS-CSIC, IBM Earth-Simulator)
How to get Dark Energy from the millimeter sky: - Modeling cosmological parameters with the acoustic peaks GTM?. - Normalization of CMB fluctuations from recombination to today (sigma_8). - Volume dV/dz: eg optical/spect follow- up (GTC) of SZ Cluster Surveys (GTM). - CMB lensing/polarization surveys. - Star formation history of the universe (GTM). - Cross-correlating optical/IR objects with CMB fluctuations. Miguel Aragon, Msc. INAOE Alfredo Montana, Msc. INAOE
PRIMARY & SECONDARY ANISOTROPIES Sachs-Wolfe (ApJ, 1967) T/T(n) = [ 1/4 (n) + v.n + (n) ] i f Temp. F. = Photon-baryon fluid AP + Doppler + N.Potential (SW) ii ff In EdS (linear regime) D(z) = a, and therfore d d Not in dominated universe ! SZ- Inverse Compton Scattering -> Polarization + Integrated Sachs-Wolfe (ISW) & Rees-Sciama (Nature, 1968) non-linear + 2 ∫ i f d d d (n)
APM SDSS
APM WMAP APM APM WMAP WMAP APM WMAP 0.7 deg FWHM 5.0 deg FWHM
0.7 deg FWHM 5.0 deg FWHM WMAP SDSS WMAP SDSS
Significance (null detection): SDSS high-z: P= 0.3% for < 10 deg. (P=1.4% for 4-10 deg) SDSS all: P= 4.8% Combined: P= % ( sigma) Pablo Fosalba, EG, F.Castander (astro-ph/ ) = ( 2-sigma)
Conclusions P.Fosalba, EG, F.Castander (astro-ph/ / ) 1.WMAP team (Nolta et al., astro- ph/ ) and Boughm & Crittenden (astro-ph/ ). Radio Galaxies (NVSS) z= SDSS team (Scranton et al ) z= dF (Myers etal , groups) 4.2Mass (Afshordi et al ) z=0.1 bias from gal-gal correlation: Agree with z-evolution of ISW effect ( ~ 0.8) At smaller scales (1 deg) and low-z signal drops, indicating SZ. No foreground contamination: clean, W and V-bands. => = ( 2-sigma) with SDSS+APM 0.77 < < 0.85 ( 2-sigma)
Simulating the mm sky HOW? -Large area (>1000 sqr.deg.’s) -Large scales (>1 Mpc) - Back to high redshifts (z=1 => L=1000’s Mpc) => Hubble Volume Simulations WHY? - Non-linear effects. - Projection effects. -SZ, lensing, sub-mm /dust in galaxies
Simulating mm sky DM HV sim Grav Pot. CMB sim Galxies. Delta T. bias Daniel Rosa-Gonzalez Z=1.0 +/ x5 deg^2 proyection dust cross