Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
8192491 | Physics Letters B | 2011 | 4 Pages |
Abstract
We present a new and especially powerful signature of cosmic strings and other topological or non-topological defects in the polarization of the cosmic microwave background (CMB). We show that even if defects contribute 1% or less in the CMB temperature anisotropy spectrum, their signature in the local BË-polarization correlation function at angular scales of tens of arc-minutes is much larger than that due to gravitational waves from inflation, even if the latter contribute with a ratio as big as râ0.1 to the temperature anisotropies. We show that when going from non-local to local BË-polarization, the ratio of the defect signal-to-noise with respect to the inflationary value increases by about an order of magnitude. Proposed B-polarization experiments, with a good sensitivity on arc-minute scales, may either detect a contribution from topological defects produced after inflation or place stringent limits on them. Already Planck should be able to improve present constraints on defect models by about an order of magnitude, to the level of ϵ=Gv2<10â7. A future full-sky experiment like CMBpol, with polarization sensitivities of the order of 1 μKâarcmin, will be able to constrain the defect parameter ϵ to less than a few Ã 10â9, depending on the defect model.
Keywords
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering
Physics and Astronomy
Nuclear and High Energy Physics
Authors
Juan GarcÃa-Bellido, Ruth Durrer, Elisa Fenu, Daniel G. Figueroa, Martin Kunz,