Teasing bits of information out of the CMB energy spectrum

Abstract

Departures of the Cosmic Microwave Background (CMB) frequency spectrum from a blackbody - commonly referred to as spectral distortions - encode information about the thermal history of the early Universe (redshift z < few x 106). While the signal is usually characterized as mu- and y-type distortion, a smaller residual (non-y/non-mu) distortion can also be created at intermediate redshifts 104 < z < 3 x 105. Here, we construct a new set of observables, muk, that describes the principal components of this residual distortion. The principal components are orthogonal to temperature shift, y- and mu-type distortion, and ranked by their detectability, thereby delivering a compression of all valuable information offered by the CMB spectrum. This method provides an efficient way of analyzing the spectral distortion for given experimental settings, and can be applied to a wide range of energy-release scenarios. As an illustration, we discuss the analysis of the spectral distortion signatures caused by dissipation of small-scale acoustic waves and decaying/annihilating particles for a PIXIE-type experiments. We provide forecasts for the expected measurement uncertainties of model parameters and detections limits in each case. We furthermore show that a PIXIE-type experiments can in principle distinguish dissipative energy release from particle decays for a nearly scale-invariant primordial power spectrum with small running. Future CMB spectroscopy thus offers a unique probe of physical processes in the primordial Universe.

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