Detection of a Supervoid Aligned with the Cold Spot of the Cosmic Microwave Background

Abstract

We use the WISE-2MASS infrared galaxy catalog matched with Pan-STARRS1 (PS1) galaxies to search for a supervoid in the direction of the Cosmic Microwave Background Cold Spot. Our imaging catalog has median redshift z 0.14, and we obtain photometric redshifts from PS1 optical colours to create a tomographic map of the galaxy distribution. The radial profile centred on the Cold Spot shows a large low density region, extending over 10's of degrees. Motivated by previous Cosmic Microwave Background results, we test for underdensities within two angular radii, 5, and 15. The counts in photometric redshift bins show significantly low densities at high detection significance, 5 σ and 6 σ, respectively, for the two fiducial radii. The line-of-sight position of the deepest region of the void is z 0.15-0.25. Our data, combined with an earlier measurement by Granett et al. 2010, are consistent with a large R void=(220 50) h-1Mpc supervoid with δm -0.14 0.04 centered at z=0.220.03. Such a supervoid, constituting at least a 3.3σ fluctuation in a Gaussian distribution of the CDM model, is a plausible cause for the Cold Spot.

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