Bibcode
Hernández-Monteagudo, C.; Rubiño-Martín, J. A.; Sunyaev, R. A.
Referencia bibliográfica
Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society, Volume 380, Issue 4, pp. 1656-1668.
Fecha de publicación:
10
2007
Número de citas
18
Número de citas referidas
11
Descripción
We implement the theory of resonant scattering in the context of cosmic
microwave background (CMB) polarization anisotropies. We compute the
changes in the E-mode polarization (EE) and temperature E-mode (TE) CMB
power spectra introduced by the scattering on a resonant transition with
a given optical depth τX and polarization coefficient
E1. The latter parameter, accounting for how anisotropic the
scattering is, depends on the exchange of angular momentum in the
transition, enabling observational discrimination between different
resonances. We use this formalism in two different scenarios:
cosmological recombination and cosmological re-ionization. In the
context of cosmological recombination, we compute predictions in
frequency and multipole space for the change in the TE and EE power
spectra introduced by scattering on the Hα and Pα lines of
hydrogen. This constitutes a fundamental test of the standard model of
recombination, and the sensitivity it requires is comparable to that
needed in measuring the primordial CMB B-mode polarization component. In
the context of re-ionization, we study the scattering off metals and
ions produced by the first stars, and find that polarization
anisotropies, apart from providing a consistency test for intensity
measurements, give some insight on how re-ionization evolved. Since
polarization anisotropies have memory of how anisotropic the line
scattering is, they should be able to discern the OI 63.2-μm
transition from other possible transitions associated to OIII, NII,
NIII, etc. The amplitude of these signals are, however, between 10 and
100 times below the (already challenging) level of CMB B-mode
polarization anisotropies.