4.6 Article

Large scale CMB anomalies from thawing cosmic strings

Journal

Publisher

IOP PUBLISHING LTD
DOI: 10.1088/1475-7516/2016/02/033

Keywords

integrated Sachs-Wolfe effect; physics of the early universe; Cosmic strings; domain walls; monopoles; CMBR theory

Funding

  1. Wallonia-Brussels Federation [ARC 11/15-040]
  2. Belgian Federal Office for Science, Technical and Cultural Affairs
  3. JSPS [15H02082]
  4. [259800]
  5. Grants-in-Aid for Scientific Research [13J09800, 15H02082] Funding Source: KAKEN

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Cosmic strings formed during inflation are expected to be either diluted over super-Bubble distances, i.e., invisible today, or to have crossed our past light cone very recently. We discuss the latter situation in which a few strings imprint their signature in the Cosmic Microwave Background (CMB) Anisotropies after recombination. Being almost frozen in the Bubble flow, these strings are quasi static and evade almost all of the previously derived constraints on their tension while being able to source large scale anisotropies in the CMB sky. Using a local variance estimator on thousand of numerically simulated Nambu-Goto all sky maps, we compute the expected signal and show that it can mimic a dipole modulation at large angular scales while being negligible at small angles. Interestingly, such a scenario generically produces one cold spot from the thawing of a cosmic string loop. Mixed with anisotropies of inflationary origin, we find that a few strings of tension GU 0(1) x 10(-6) match the amplitude of the dipole modulation reported in the Planck satellite measurements and could be at the origin of other large scale anomalies.

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