[astro-ph/0611198] Improved Measurements of the CMB Power Spectrum with ACBAR
Authors: | C.L. Kuo (1,2), P.A.R. Ade (3), J.J. Bock (1,2), J.R. Bond (4), C.R. Contaldi (4,5), M.D. Daub (6), J.H. Goldstein (7), W.L. Holzapfel (6), A.E. Lange (1,2), M. Lueker (6), M. Newcomb (8), J.B. Peterson (9), C. Reichardt (1), J. Ruhl (7), M. |
Abstract: | We report improved measurements of temperature anisotropies in the cosmic microwave background (CMB) radiation made with the Arcminute Cosmology Bolometer Array Receiver (ACBAR). In this paper, we use a new analysis technique and include 30% more data from the 2001 and 2002 observing seasons than the first release to derive a new set of band-power measurements with significantly smaller uncertainties. The planet-based calibration used previously has been replaced by comparing the flux of RCW38 as measured by ACBAR and BOOMERANG to transfer the WMAP-based BOOMERANG calibration to ACBAR. The resulting power spectrum is consistent with the theoretical predictions for a spatially flat, dark energy dominated LCDM cosmology including the effects of gravitational lensing. Despite the exponential damping on small angular scales, the primary CMB fluctuations are detected with a signal-to-noise ratio of greater than 4 up to multipoles of l=2000. This increase in the precision of the fine-scale CMB power spectrum leads to only a modest decrease in the uncertainties on the parameters of the standard cosmological model. At high angular resolution, secondary anisotropies are predicted to be a significant contribution to the measured anisotropy. A joint analysis of the ACBAR results at 150 GHz and the CBI results at 30 GHz in the multipole range 2000 < l < 3000 shows that the power, reported by CBI in excess of the predicted primary anisotropy, has a frequency spectrum consistent with the thermal Sunyaev-Zel'dovich effect and inconsistent with primary CMB. The results reported here are derived from a subset of the total ACBAR data set; the final ACBAR power spectrum at 150 GHz will include 3.7 times more effective integration time and 6.5 times more sky coverage than is used here. |
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[astro-ph/0611198] Improved Measurements of the CMB Power Sp
This paper gives a detailed analysis of 2002 ACBAR data, including a nice treatment of the SZ effect, which they claim is the most likely explanation of the excess power seen by CBI on small scales.
1. What's the status of the rest of the data? (out soon, or another three years?)
2. Parameters constraints seem to have \tau = 0.097\pm 0.014, an error less than half the size of that usually obtained from WMAP3. This doesn't look consistent with Fig 5.
3. Are CosmoMC data files available with recommended settings for a non-SZ analysis?
1. What's the status of the rest of the data? (out soon, or another three years?)
2. Parameters constraints seem to have \tau = 0.097\pm 0.014, an error less than half the size of that usually obtained from WMAP3. This doesn't look consistent with Fig 5.
3. Are CosmoMC data files available with recommended settings for a non-SZ analysis?
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Re: [astro-ph/0611198] Improved Measurements of the CMB Powe
I may be wrong here, but several parameters look a little funny, I think. First, n_s for the updated WMAP likelihood is listed to be 0.966, while Jostein Kristiansen found 0.960 in his test run, I believe. At least a part of this could be due to inclusion of lensing, though.. Second, the marginalized likelihoods in Figure 5 have too many bumps and wiggles on them for my taste.Antony Lewis wrote: 2. Parameters constraints seem to have \tau = 0.097\pm 0.014, an error less than half the size of that usually obtained from WMAP3. This doesn't look consistent with Fig 5.
All in all, I have a slightly uneasy feeling about convergence in these results. The authors say in the text that they run CosmoMC until "the largest eigenvalue of the GR test is less than 0.1". Not sure what eigenvalue means in this respect, but if it's simply the GR statistic as outputted from CosmoMC, then I think 1.1 is a little too liberal. For publications, I generally prefer R < 1.01. But of course, I may be entirely wrong here, and perhaps eigenvalue means something different in this respect.
I also noted that there seems to be a trend for high values in Figure 3 -- except for the fifth Acbar data point, which is spot on the theoretical curve, the first nine points are high. Any idea what this could be due to? Statistical fluctuation seems unlikely..?
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[astro-ph/0611198] Improved Measurements of the CMB Power Sp
I may be wrong here, but several parameters look a little funny, I think. First, ns for the updated WMAP likelihood is listed to be 0.966, while Jostein Kristiansen found 0.960 in his test run, I believe. At least a part of this could be due to inclusion of lensing, though.. Second, the marginalized likelihoods in Figure 5 have too many bumps and wiggles on them for my taste.
The value of [tex]n_s[/tex] is due to lensing as you mentioned. We get 0.960 without lensing for the WMAP3 (updated likelihood) only case.
The largest GR eigenvalue should read 0.01 in the text, this was our criterion for convergence. The current version's 0.1 is a typo. e.g. WMAP3 only has 0.008.Second, the marginalized likelihoods in Figure 5 have too many bumps and wiggles on them for my taste...All in all, I have a slightly uneasy feeling about convergence in these results. The authors say in the text that they run CosmoMC until "the largest eigenvalue of the GR test is less than 0.1".
In power the calibration error is 12% so you should bear this in mind when doing a [tex]\chi^2[/tex]-by-eye since we haven't rescaled the power spectrum in any of the plots.I also noted that there seems to be a trend for high values in Figure 3 – except for the fifth Acbar data point, which is spot on the theoretical curve, the first nine points are high. Any idea what this could be due to? Statistical fluctuation seems unlikely..?
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Re: [astro-ph/0611198] Improved Measurements of the CMB Powe
Thanks for spotting that Antony! The errors in the table for [tex]\tau[/tex] are a typo, they should be around 0.03 as you said. Figure 5 (and median values of [tex]\tau[/tex]) are correct. [tex]\tau[/tex] line of table 4 should readAntony Lewis wrote: 2. Parameters constraints seem to have \tau = 0.097\pm 0.014, an error less than half the size of that usually obtained from WMAP3. This doesn't look consistent with Fig 5.
[tex]\tau=0.097^{+0.033}_{-0.030} \ \ 0.092^{+0.029}_{-0.030}\ \ 0.092^{+0.028}_{-0.029} \ \ 0.090^{+0.027}_{-0.027}[/tex].
All other numbers are unaffected.
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Re: [astro-ph/0611198] Improved Measurements of the CMB Powe
I suppose there is no good excuse for taking three years to publish this. As it turned out, we spent a long time sorting out the details of the calibration. In the complete data set, there is sufficient sky coverage to calibrate directly from WMAP->ACBAR and we anticipate that this will go more smoothly. It seems reasonable that we will have the final power spectrum out in ~ six months.Antony Lewis wrote:This paper gives a detailed analysis of 2002 ACBAR data, including a nice treatment of the SZ effect, which they claim is the most likely explanation of the excess power seen by CBI on small scales.
1. What's the status of the rest of the data? (out soon, or another three years?)
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Re: [astro-ph/0611198] Improved Measurements of the CMB Powe
The marginalized distributions for WMAP-only still looked funny to me (take a look at the bumps at high values for tau and A, and the funny shape of n_s), so I started a run including lensing last night. The parameters I got were these:Carlo Contaldi wrote:I may be wrong here, but several parameters look a little funny, I think. First, ns for the updated WMAP likelihood is listed to be 0.966, while Jostein Kristiansen found 0.960 in his test run, I believe. At least a part of this could be due to inclusion of lensing, though.. Second, the marginalized likelihoods in Figure 5 have too many bumps and wiggles on them for my taste.
The value of [tex]n_s[/tex] is due to lensing as you mentioned. We get 0.960 without lensing for the WMAP3 (updated likelihood) only case.
The largest GR eigenvalue should read 0.01 in the text, this was our criterion for convergence. The current version's 0.1 is a typo. e.g. WMAP3 only has 0.008.Second, the marginalized likelihoods in Figure 5 have too many bumps and wiggles on them for my taste...All in all, I have a slightly uneasy feeling about convergence in these results. The authors say in the text that they run CosmoMC until "the largest eigenvalue of the GR test is less than 0.1".
Omega_b h^2 0.0224 +/- 0.0007
Omega_c h^2 0.107 +/- 0.008
theta 1.04 +/- 0.004
tau 0.0923 +/- 0.03
n_s 0.963 +/- 0.016
log(10^10 A_s) 3.04 +/- 0.07
That is, the shift in n_s is smaller than what's listed in Kuo et al., where the value is 0.966, and tau is also smaller. Also, the distributions I get all look smooth and nice, without any bumps and wiggles. For reference, R-1 is 0.011 for this run.
Then again, I don't have a lot of experience with lensing, so I may have forgotten some switch -- all I did, was to set CMB_lensing=T in params.ini.
Did you use the WMAP likelihood out of the box, so to speak, or did you make some other changes as well?
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Re: [astro-ph/0611198] Improved Measurements of the CMB Powe
The version we used may have some small differences from the lambda version as it comes directly from the development of the updated likelihood code that was done a couple of weeks ago at CITA by Mike Nolta and Jon Sievers. I will check against the official version to see if there are any differences.Hans Kristian Eriksen wrote: Did you use the WMAP likelihood out of the box, so to speak, or did you make some other changes as well?
There are some lensing accuracy tweaks that you can set in the CAMB params but I think that should not affect results for WMAP's relatively low [tex] l[/tex] limit.
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[astro-ph/0611198] Improved Measurements of the CMB Power Sp
A stuipd question (probably): Why is the errorbar for the WMAP quadrupole extending below zero in figure 3?
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[astro-ph/0611198] Improved Measurements of the CMB Power Sp
I read the paper with interest but I could not follow some of the details.
1) When they say "WMAP3+ACBAR" in sec 6 and 7, do they use all the bands in table 3 ? I thought highest (4?) [tex]\ell[/tex] bands should not be used when SZ is not included. Or does it make no difference?
2) In sec 7.3 (or table 5), I infer "CMBall" does not include the highest [tex]\ell[/tex] band of CBI but "CMBall+BIMA" does. Am I correct?
In connection with this, I would like to know whether the constraint on [tex]\alpha^{SZ}[/tex] for "CMBall+BIMA" changes when BIMA is not used.
1) When they say "WMAP3+ACBAR" in sec 6 and 7, do they use all the bands in table 3 ? I thought highest (4?) [tex]\ell[/tex] bands should not be used when SZ is not included. Or does it make no difference?
2) In sec 7.3 (or table 5), I infer "CMBall" does not include the highest [tex]\ell[/tex] band of CBI but "CMBall+BIMA" does. Am I correct?
In connection with this, I would like to know whether the constraint on [tex]\alpha^{SZ}[/tex] for "CMBall+BIMA" changes when BIMA is not used.
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[astro-ph/0611198] Improved Measurements of the CMB Power Sp
Hi,
I was willing to run some cosmoMC chains using the new ACBAR data, and so I was trying to organize the data in a "cosmoMC-friendly" form, i.e. a form similar to the one of the datafiles included in the cosmoMc distribution like ACBAR_lge800_.dataset. However I have some questions on this:
1. According to the paper the calibration uncertainity is 6%, and it is said that this value is nearly unchanged from the 2002 data release. However the 2002 ACBAR data file in cosmoMC reads
calib_uncertainity = 0.2
so am I missing something or this is just a more conservative estimate?
2. I cannot find, neither in the website nor in the paper, the values of the beam uncertainities. Is this ok (i.e., we have to wait the collaboration to make them available) or again am I missing something? If the values are for the moment unavailable, can I simply put
beam_uncertainity = F
in the .dataset file?
Thanks
Massimiliano
I was willing to run some cosmoMC chains using the new ACBAR data, and so I was trying to organize the data in a "cosmoMC-friendly" form, i.e. a form similar to the one of the datafiles included in the cosmoMc distribution like ACBAR_lge800_.dataset. However I have some questions on this:
1. According to the paper the calibration uncertainity is 6%, and it is said that this value is nearly unchanged from the 2002 data release. However the 2002 ACBAR data file in cosmoMC reads
calib_uncertainity = 0.2
so am I missing something or this is just a more conservative estimate?
2. I cannot find, neither in the website nor in the paper, the values of the beam uncertainities. Is this ok (i.e., we have to wait the collaboration to make them available) or again am I missing something? If the values are for the moment unavailable, can I simply put
beam_uncertainity = F
in the .dataset file?
Thanks
Massimiliano
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Re: [astro-ph/0611198] Improved Measurements of the CMB Powe
Hi Massimiliano,
The central value didn't change much, but we improve its uncertainty.
The calibration uncertainty was 10% in the previous release,
in temperature unit. The new calibration uncertainty (6%) would
make calib_uncertainity = 0.12.
The beam uncertainty is 3%, as stated in the first paper.
Thank you.
Chao-Lin
The central value didn't change much, but we improve its uncertainty.
The calibration uncertainty was 10% in the previous release,
in temperature unit. The new calibration uncertainty (6%) would
make calib_uncertainity = 0.12.
The beam uncertainty is 3%, as stated in the first paper.
Thank you.
Chao-Lin
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[astro-ph/0611198] Improved Measurements of the CMB Power Sp
Hi Chao-Lin
Thank you very much for your answer. Things are clearer now.
However I still cannot exactly figure out where the numbers in the fourth column (beam uncertainity) of the ACBAR_lge800_.dataset file provided with cosmomc, come from. They all amount to a few percent of the measured value, but some are large as 7-8%.
Probably this will not make so large a difference in the final MCMC results, but I was wondering anyway. Can you or someone else clarify on this?
Thanks
Massimiliano
Thank you very much for your answer. Things are clearer now.
However I still cannot exactly figure out where the numbers in the fourth column (beam uncertainity) of the ACBAR_lge800_.dataset file provided with cosmomc, come from. They all amount to a few percent of the measured value, but some are large as 7-8%.
Probably this will not make so large a difference in the final MCMC results, but I was wondering anyway. Can you or someone else clarify on this?
Thanks
Massimiliano
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Re: [astro-ph/0611198] Improved Measurements of the CMB Powe
It looks like those errors are symmetric about the data point, i.e. they are Gaussian errors. A more careful analysis would lead to a lower bound on the quadrupole that is closer to the data point than the upper bound, and above zero.Håvard Alnes wrote:A stuipd question (probably): Why is the errorbar for the WMAP quadrupole extending below zero in figure 3?
[astro-ph/0611198] Improved Measurements of the CMB Power Sp
Yes.A more careful analysis would lead to a lower bound on the quadrupole that is closer to the data point than the upper bound,
Ideally, but not necessarily. Some methods can have error bars that legitimately extend below zero in high noise situations (essentially where you're finding the difference between two large numbers, data and noise, where you haven't perfectly estimated the noise). Bayesian approaches can deal with these situations with a sensible prior.and above zero.