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BICEP/ Keck XVIII: Measurement of BICEP3 polarization angles and consequences for constraining cosmic birefringence and inflation

  • (BICEP/ Keck Collaboration)
  • Cardiff University
  • Kavli Institute for Particle Astrophysics and Cosmology
  • SLAC National Accelerator Laboratory
  • University of British Columbia
  • Center for Astrophysics | Harvard & Smithsonian
  • California Institute of Technology Division of Engineering and Applied Science
  • University of Cincinnati
  • Stanford University
  • California Institute of Technology
  • The University of Chicago
  • University of Minnesota Twin Cities
  • National Institute of Standards and Technology
  • Commissariat à l’énergie atomique et aux énergies alternatives
  • Harvard University
  • University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
  • Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

6 Scopus citations

Abstract

We use a custom-made calibrator to measure individual detectors' polarization angles of BICEP3, a small aperture telescope observing the cosmic microwave background (CMB) at 95 GHz from the South Pole. We describe our calibration strategy and the statistical and systematic uncertainties associated with the measurement. We reach an unprecedented precision for such measurement on a CMB experiment, with a repeatability for each detector pair of 0.02°. We show that the relative angles measured using this method are in excellent agreement with those extracted from CMB data. Because the absolute measurement is currently limited by a systematic uncertainty, we do not derive cosmic birefringence constraints from BICEP3 data in this work. Rather, we forecast the sensitivity of BICEP3 sky maps for such analysis. We investigate the relative contributions of instrument noise, lensing, and dust, as well as astrophysical and instrumental systematics. We also explore the constraining power of different angle estimators, depending on analysis choices. We establish that the BICEP3 2-year dataset (2017-2018) has an on-sky sensitivity to the cosmic birefringence angle of σα=0.078°, which could be improved to σα=0.055° by adding all of the existing BICEP3 data (through 2023). Furthermore, we emphasize the possibility of using the BICEP3 sky patch as a polarization calibration source for CMB experiments, which with the present data could reach a precision of 0.035°. Finally, in the context of inflation searches, we investigate the impact of detector-to-detector variations in polarization angles as they may bias the tensor-to-scalar ratio r. We show that while the effect is expected to remain subdominant to other sources of systematic uncertainty, it can be reliably calibrated using polarization angle measurements such as the ones we present in this paper.

Original languageEnglish
Article number063505
JournalPhysical Review D
Volume111
Issue number6
DOIs
StatePublished - Mar 15 2025
Externally publishedYes

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