The CMB cold spot under the lens: ruling out a supervoid interpretation
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 region with -value in standard CDM. 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 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 CDM, 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