From physicsworld: “Planck offers another glimpse of the early universe”

physicsworld
physicsworld.com

Dec 4, 2014
Tushna Commissariat

Results of four years of observations made by the Planck space telescope provide the most precise confirmation so far of the Standard Model of cosmology, and also place new constraints on the properties of potential dark-matter candidates. That is the conclusion of astronomers working on the €700m mission of the European Space Agency (ESA). Planck studies the intensity and the polarization of the cosmic microwave background (CMB), which is the thermal remnant of the Big Bang. These latest results will no doubt frustrate cosmologists, because Planck has so far failed to shed much light on some of the biggest mysteries of physics, including what constitutes the dark matter and dark energy that appears to dominate the universe.

e
Lambda-Cold Dark Matter, Accelerated Expansion of the Universe, Big Bang-Inflation (timeline of the universe)

ESA Planck
ESA Planck schematic
ESA/Planck

Cosmic Background Radiation Planck
Cosmic Background Radiation per Planck

WMAP
NASA/WMAP spacecraft

Cosmic Background Radiation per WMAP
Cosmic Background Radiation per WMAP

Planck ran from 2009–2013, and the first data were released in March last year, comprising temperature data taken during the first 15 months of observations. A more complete data set from Planck will be published later this month, and is being previewed this week at a conference in Ferrara, Italy (Planck 2014 – The microwave sky in temperature and polarization). So far, Planck scientists have revealed that a previous disagreement of 1–1.5% between Planck and its predecessor – NASA’s Wilkinson Microwave Anisotropy Probe (WMAP) – regarding the mission’s “absolute-temperature” measurements has been reduced to 0.3%.

Winnowing dark matter

Planck’s latest measurement of the CMB polarization rules out a class of dark-matter models involving particle annihilation in the early universe. These models were developed to explain excesses of cosmic-ray positrons that have been measured by three independent experiments – the PAMELA mission, the Alpha Magnetic Spectrometer and the Fermi Gamma-Ray Space Telescope.

INFN PAMELA spacecraft
PAMELA

AMS-02
AMS-02

NASA Fermi Telescope
NASA/Fermi

The Planck collaboration also revealed that it has, for the first time, “detected unambiguously” traces left behind by primordial neutrinos on the CMB. Such neutrinos are thought to have been released one second after the Big Bang, when the universe was still opaque to light but already transparent to these elusive particles. Planck has set an upper limit (0.23 eV/c2) on the sum of the masses of the three types of neutrinos known to exist. Furthermore, the new data exclude the existence of a fourth type of neutrino that is favoured by some models.

Planck versus BICEP2

Despite the new data, the collaboration did not give any insights into the recent controversy surrounding the possible detection of primordial “B-mode” polarization of the CMB by astronomers working on the BICEP2 telescope.

BICEP 2
BICEP 2 interior
BICEP 2 with South Pole Telescope

If verified, the BICEP2 observation would be “smoking-gun” evidence for the rapid “inflation” of the early universe – the extremely rapid expansion that cosmologists believe the universe underwent a mere 10–35 s after the Big Bang. A new analysis of polarized dust emission in our galaxy, carried out by Planck earlier in September, showed that the part of the sky observed by BICEP2 has much more dust than originally anticipated, and while this did not completely rule out BICEP2’s original claim, it established that the dust emission is nearly as big as the entire BICEP2 signal. Both Planck and BICEP2 have since been working together on joint analysis of their data, but a result is still forthcoming.

[THIS IS THE BEST WE CAN DO UNTIL ESA RELEASES THEIR LATEST FINDINGS FROM PLANCK]

See the full article here.

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