English

The CMB cold spot under the lens: ruling out a supervoid interpretation

Cosmology and Nongalactic Astrophysics 2023-06-19 v2

Abstract

The Cosmic Microwave Background (CMB) anisotropies are thought to be statistically isotropic and Gaussian. However, several anomalies are observed, including the CMB Cold Spot, an unexpected cold 10\sim 10^{\circ} region with pp-value 0.01\lesssim 0.01 in standard Λ\LambdaCDM. One of the proposed origins of the Cold Spot is an unusually large void on the line of sight, that would generate a cold region through the combination of integrated Sachs-Wolfe and Rees-Sciama effects. In the past decade extensive searches were conducted in large scale structure surveys, both in optical and infrared, in the same area for z1z \lesssim 1 and did find evidence of large voids, but of depth and size able to account for only a fraction of the anomaly. Here we analyze the lensing signal in the Planck CMB data and rule out the hypothesis that the Cold Spot could be due to a large void located anywhere between us and the surface of last scattering. In particular, computing the evidence ratio we find that a model with a large void is disfavored compared to Λ\LambdaCDM, with odds 1 : 13 (1 : 20) for SMICA (NILC) maps, compared to the original odds 56 : 1 (21 : 1) using temperature data alone.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.2211.16139,
  title  = {The CMB cold spot under the lens: ruling out a supervoid interpretation},
  author = {Stephen Owusu and Pedro da Silveira Ferreira and Alessio Notari and Miguel Quartin},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:2211.16139},
  year   = {2023}
}

Comments

v2: typos corrected in some equations; extra analysis in Section 5. Accepted for publication in JCAP