A Measurement of Gravitational Lensing of the Cosmic Microwave Background Using SPT-3G 2018 Data

Abstract

We present a measurement of gravitational lensing over 1500 deg2 of the Southern sky using SPT-3G temperature data at 95 and 150 GHz taken in 2018. The lensing amplitude relative to a fiducial Planck 2018 cosmology is found to be 1.0200.060, excluding instrumental and astrophysical systematic uncertainties. We conduct extensive systematic and null tests to check the robustness of the lensing measurements, and report a minimum-variance combined lensing power spectrum over angular multipoles of 50<L<2000, which we use to constrain cosmological models. When analyzed alone and jointly with primary cosmic microwave background (CMB) spectra within the model, our lensing amplitude measurements are consistent with measurements from SPT-SZ, SPTpol, ACT, and Planck. Incorporating loose priors on the baryon density and other parameters including uncertainties on a foreground bias template, we obtain a 1σ constraint on σ8 m0.25=0.595 0.026 using the SPT-3G 2018 lensing data alone, where σ8 is a common measure of the amplitude of structure today and m is the matter density parameter. Combining SPT-3G 2018 lensing measurements with baryon acoustic oscillation (BAO) data, we derive parameter constraints of σ8 = 0.810 0.033, S8 σ8( m/0.3)0.5= 0.836 0.039, and Hubble constant H0 =68.8+1.3-1.6 km s-1 Mpc-1. Using CMB anisotropy and lensing measurements from SPT-3G only, we provide independent constraints on the spatial curvature of K = 0.014+0.023-0.026 (95% C.L.) and the dark energy density of = 0.722+0.031-0.026 (68% C.L.). When combining SPT-3G lensing data with SPT-3G CMB anisotropy and BAO data, we find an upper limit on the sum of the neutrino masses of Σ m< 0.30 eV (95% C.L.).

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