http://arxiv.org/abs/1703.07894
We reanalyse the cosmic microwave background (CMB) Cold Spot (CS) anomaly with particular focus on understanding the bias a mask (to remove Galactic and point sources contamination) may introduce. We measure the coldest spot, found by applying the Spherical Mexican Hat Wavelet (SMHW) transform on 100,000 masked and unmasked CMB simulated maps. The coldest spot in masked maps is the same as in unmasked maps only 48% of the time, suggesting that false minima are more frequently measured in masked maps. Given the temperature profile of the CS, we estimate at 94% the probability that the CS is the coldest spot on the sky, making the comparison to the unmasked coldest spots appropriate. We found that the significance of the CS is approximately 1.9 sigma for an angular scale R=5 degrees of the SMHW (< 2 sigma for all R). Furthermore, the Integrated Sachs-Wolfe (ISW) contributes approximately 10% (mean of approximately -10 microK but consistent with zero) of the full profile of the coldest spots. This is consistent with recent LambdaCDM ISW reconstructions of line of sight voids.
K. Naidoo, A. Benoit-Levy and O. Lahav
Fri, 24 Mar 17
40/41
Comments: 5 pages, 5 figures, submitted to MNRAS letters in this form
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