Tuesdays 10:30 - 11:30 | Fridays 11:30 - 12:30
Showing votes from 2017-02-10 12:30 to 2017-02-14 11:30 | Next meeting is Friday May 22nd, 11:30 am.
We perform a complete study of the gravitational lensing effect beyond the Born approximation on the Cosmic Microwave Background (CMB) anisotropies using a multiple-lens raytracing technique through cosmological N-body simulations of the DEMNUni suite. The impact of second order effects accounting for the non-linear evolution of large-scale structures is evaluated propagating for the first time the full CMB lensing jacobian together with the light rays trajectory. We carefully investigate the robustness of our approach against several numerical effects in the raytracing procedure and in the N-body simulation itself, and found no evidence of large contaminations. We discuss the impact of beyond Born corrections on lensed CMB observables and show that the leading correction term is due to the rotation of the polarization basis induced by matter perturbations. We compare our results with recent analytical predictions that appeared in the literature finding very good agreement and extend these results to smaller angular scales. Finally we discuss the detection prospect of beyond Born effects with the future CMB-S4 experiment. We found that corrections to the B-modes power spectrum could be measured at $2\sigma$ level. Moreover the gravitational rotation signature will produce an effective anisotropic rotation of the Stokes parameter analogous to an anisotropic birefringence effect that could be constrained by CMB-S4.
Primordial black holes (PBH) have been shown to arise from high peaks in the matter power spectra of multi-field models of inflation. Here we show, with a simple toy model, that it is also possible to generate a peak in the curvature power spectrum of single-field inflation. We assume that the effective dynamics of the inflaton field presents a near-inflection point which slows down the field right before the end of inflation and gives rise to a prominent spike in the fluctuation power spectrum at scales much smaller than those probed by Cosmic Microwave Background (CMB) and Large Scale Structure (LSS) observations. This peak will give rise, upon reentry during the radiation era, to PBH via gravitational collapse. The mass and abundance of these PBH is such that they could constitute the totality of the Dark Matter today. We satisfy all CMB and LSS constraints and predict a very broad range of PBH masses. Some of these PBH are light enough that they will evaporate before structure formation, leaving behind a large curvature fluctuation on small scales. This broad mass distribution of PBH as Dark Matter will be tested in the future by AdvLIGO and LISA interferometers.