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arxiv: 1610.09365 · v1 · pith:IQMZROKTnew · submitted 2016-10-28 · 🌌 astro-ph.CO · gr-qc· hep-th

Establishing the origin of CMB B-mode polarization

classification 🌌 astro-ph.CO gr-qchep-th
keywords gravitationalpolarizationwavescross-correlationmodeeffectslargelensing
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Primordial gravitational waves leave a characteristic imprint on the cosmic microwave background (CMB) in the form of $B$-mode polarization. Photons are also deflected by large scale gravitational waves which intervene between the source screen and our telescopes, resulting in curl-type gravitational lensing. Gravitational waves present at the epoch of reionization contribute to both effects, thereby leading to a non-vanishing cross-correlation between $B$-mode polarization and curl lensing of the CMB. Observing such a cross correlation would be very strong evidence that an observation of $B$-mode polarization was due to the presence of large scale gravitational waves, as opposed to astrophysical foregrounds or experimental systematic effects. We study the cross-correlation across a wide range of source redshifts and show that a post-SKA experiment aimed to map out the 21-cm sky between $15 \leq z \leq 30$ could rule out non-zero cross-correlation at high significance for $r \geq 0.01$.

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