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Page 1: Cosmic Microwave Backgrounddas.inpe.br/school/2011/lectures/PaolodeBernardis_Lecture2.pdf · Cosmic Microwave Background 2/5 Paolo de Bernardis Dipartimento di Fisica, Universita’

Cosmic Microwave Background

2/5

Paolo de BernardisDipartimento di Fisica, Universita’ La Sapienza, Roma

Sao Jose dos Campos12/Sep/2011

IV INPE Advanced School on AstrophysicsRadio Astronomy for the 21st Century

Page 2: Cosmic Microwave Backgrounddas.inpe.br/school/2011/lectures/PaolodeBernardis_Lecture2.pdf · Cosmic Microwave Background 2/5 Paolo de Bernardis Dipartimento di Fisica, Universita’

What is the CMB According to moderncosmology:An abundant background of photons filling the Universe.

• Generated in the very earlyuniverse, less than 4 μs after the Big Bang (109γ for each baryon) from a small asymmetry

• Thermalized in the primevalfireball (in the first 380000 years after the big bang) byrepeated scattering against freeelectrons

• Redshifted to microwavefrequencies (zCMB=1100) and diluted in the subsequent 14 Gyrs of expansion of the Universe

γ2→+ bb

t

10−6s

1013s

1017s

visibleNIRMW

visibleNIRMW

T=3000K

T=3K

em

now

em

now

rrz ==+

λλ1

T >1GeV

B(ν)

B(ν)

Today 400γ/cm3

bb −

Page 3: Cosmic Microwave Backgrounddas.inpe.br/school/2011/lectures/PaolodeBernardis_Lecture2.pdf · Cosmic Microwave Background 2/5 Paolo de Bernardis Dipartimento di Fisica, Universita’

σ (cm-1) wavenumber (= 1/λ(cm))

Page 4: Cosmic Microwave Backgrounddas.inpe.br/school/2011/lectures/PaolodeBernardis_Lecture2.pdf · Cosmic Microwave Background 2/5 Paolo de Bernardis Dipartimento di Fisica, Universita’

Environment ! Space : to remove atmospheric emissionCryogenics : to limit instrumental emission

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COBE-FIRAS• COBE-FIRAS was a

cryogenic Martin-Puplett Fourier-TransformSpectrometer withcomposite bolometers. It wasplaced in a 400 km orbit.

• A null instrumentcomparing the specificsky brightness to the brightness of a cryogenic Blackbody

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All this is cooled at 2K (-271oC)

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Fourier TransformSpectrometers (FTS)

• To measure spectra, you useinterference (prism, grating, FP … )

• In the case of the FTS only 2 light beams interfere: this is the simplestexperimental configuration, but resultsin a complex encoding of the spectrum.

Page 8: Cosmic Microwave Backgrounddas.inpe.br/school/2011/lectures/PaolodeBernardis_Lecture2.pdf · Cosmic Microwave Background 2/5 Paolo de Bernardis Dipartimento di Fisica, Universita’

• Take the beam to beanalyzed (A), transform itinto a quasi-parallel beam(C), and split it in two beams(D).

• Delay one of the two beams(E), driving it along a longeroptical path (x).

• Recombine the beams on the detector (H and J), and record the detected power vs. the optical pathdifference (this is called the interferogram).

• The interferogram is the Fourier transform of the spectrum of the incomingradiation (as shown below).

Recipe for a FTS

ZPD

OPD

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( )( ) )42cos()(

)2cos()()(xctRTE

ctRTEtE

o

o

πσπσσσπσσσ

+++=

• The OPD (optical pathdifference) is 2x.

• For a perfectlymonochromatic radiation withwavenumber σ (=1/λ) the resulting field on the detector will be

• Here RT is the efficiency of the beamsplitter (frequencydependent, in general)

ZPD

OPD

Elementary theory of the FTS

Page 10: Cosmic Microwave Backgrounddas.inpe.br/school/2011/lectures/PaolodeBernardis_Lecture2.pdf · Cosmic Microwave Background 2/5 Paolo de Bernardis Dipartimento di Fisica, Universita’

Elementary theory of the FTS( ) ( ) )42cos()()2cos()()( xctRTEctRTEtE oo πσπσσσπσσσ ++=

( ) [ ][ ]( ) [ ] ( ) )4cos1(2)(11)(

)(

)()()()(

2442

4224222

*2

xrtEeertE

eeeeeertE

tEtEtExI

oxixi

o

xictictixictictio

πσσσσσ

σσπσπσ

πσπσπσπσπσπσ

+=+++=

=++=

==∝

−−−

)4cos()()( xrtIxI πσσ=−

( ) σπσσσ dxrtSIxI )4cos()()(0∫∞

=−

• The power on the detector I(x) will beproportional to the mean square electrical field:

• So the interferogram is• If the input radiation is not monochromatic, and

each wavenumber has amplitude S(σ):The specificBrightness and the interferogram are related by a FourierTransform

Page 11: Cosmic Microwave Backgrounddas.inpe.br/school/2011/lectures/PaolodeBernardis_Lecture2.pdf · Cosmic Microwave Background 2/5 Paolo de Bernardis Dipartimento di Fisica, Universita’

Moving mirror displacement x (μm)

Det

ecte

dP

ower

I(x)

Det

ecte

dP

ower

I(x)

( ) σπσσσ dxrtSIxI )4cos()()(0∫∞

=−

Page 12: Cosmic Microwave Backgrounddas.inpe.br/school/2011/lectures/PaolodeBernardis_Lecture2.pdf · Cosmic Microwave Background 2/5 Paolo de Bernardis Dipartimento di Fisica, Universita’

Elementary theory of the FTS

• For obvious reasons we cannot extend x toinfinity ! If the maximum displacement of the moving mirror is xmax , all we can do is tocompute

• S’ is an approximation of the real spectrum S • The main difference is in the effective

spectral resolution of the spectrometer, which for S’ is limited to approx. 1/(2xmax).

( ) ( ) dxxIxIrtS )4cos()()( πσσσ ∫∞

∞−

−=

( ) ( ) dxxIxIrtSx

x

)4cos()()(max

max

' πσσσ ∫−

−=

Page 13: Cosmic Microwave Backgrounddas.inpe.br/school/2011/lectures/PaolodeBernardis_Lecture2.pdf · Cosmic Microwave Background 2/5 Paolo de Bernardis Dipartimento di Fisica, Universita’

Spectral Resolution• Consider a monochromatic line with

wavenumebr σo: the interferogram is

• The Fourier integral, limited to +xmax, is:

• This is an approximation of the real S(σ) which would be a delta function centeredin σo : in place of a delta, we get a sinc, with a half-width approx. 1.23/(2xmax).

( )

( ) ( )( ) max

maxmax

'

'

44sin

)4cos()4cos(max

max

xxxIS

dxxxIS

o

oo

x

xoo

σσπσσπσ

πσπσσ

−−

=

⇒= ∫−

)4cos()( xIIxI oo πσ=−

Page 14: Cosmic Microwave Backgrounddas.inpe.br/school/2011/lectures/PaolodeBernardis_Lecture2.pdf · Cosmic Microwave Background 2/5 Paolo de Bernardis Dipartimento di Fisica, Universita’

σ (cm-1) wavenumber (= 1/λ(cm))

Working with continuous radiation, lowspectral resolution is not a real problem: with a maximum displacement of the moving mirror of 1 cm we get a resolution of about 0.5 cm-1 (15 GHz), perfect to describe the blackbody curve.Working with spectral lines, one wouldhave to increase the displacement. 1m is surely feasable.

Page 15: Cosmic Microwave Backgrounddas.inpe.br/school/2011/lectures/PaolodeBernardis_Lecture2.pdf · Cosmic Microwave Background 2/5 Paolo de Bernardis Dipartimento di Fisica, Universita’

Beamsplitter problems

• What we get is the input spectrum times the efficiency of the beamsplitter.

• If the latter goes to zero, we cannot retrievethe spectrum.

• So we need good beamplitters, ideally withrt=0.25, independent on frequency.

( ) ( ) dxxIxIrtSx

x

)4cos()()(max

max

' πσσσ ∫−

−=

Page 16: Cosmic Microwave Backgrounddas.inpe.br/school/2011/lectures/PaolodeBernardis_Lecture2.pdf · Cosmic Microwave Background 2/5 Paolo de Bernardis Dipartimento di Fisica, Universita’

• The simplestbeamsplitter is a dielectric slab, withrefaction index n and thickness t.

• Due to multiple reflections inside the slab, the transmittedand reflected fieldscan be computed asthe sum of an infinite number of components withdecreasing amplitude(a converging series) and increasing phasedelay.

the beamsplitter

rrt2

r3t2

r5t2

r7t2

t rtr2t

t2

r2t2

r4t2

r6t2

nσθπδ 'cos4 nd=

( ) ( )( ) ...32cos

22cos2cos2cos(25

232

+++

+++++−=

δπσ

δπσδπσπσ

cttr

cttrctrtctrEE o

From this, the efficiency rt(σ) is computed

Page 17: Cosmic Microwave Backgrounddas.inpe.br/school/2011/lectures/PaolodeBernardis_Lecture2.pdf · Cosmic Microwave Background 2/5 Paolo de Bernardis Dipartimento di Fisica, Universita’

'cosθσ

ndm

m =

the beamsplitter• The efficiency is a

periodic functionwith zeros at wavenumbers

• Whateverthickness and refraction indexyou select, this isnot efficient at lowfrequencies.

PolyethyleneTerephthalate(mylar or melinex)n=1.7

Page 18: Cosmic Microwave Backgrounddas.inpe.br/school/2011/lectures/PaolodeBernardis_Lecture2.pdf · Cosmic Microwave Background 2/5 Paolo de Bernardis Dipartimento di Fisica, Universita’

Linear Polarizers• Linear polarizers can be used as high efficiency

achromatic beamsplitters at long wavelengths.• A linear polarizer is an optical device transmitting

only the projection of the E field of the EM waveparallel to a given direction, which is called the principal axis of the polarizer.

• Unpolarized radiation (where the E field direction in the wavefront is random) is transformed intolinearly polarized radiation (where the E fielddirection is constant) when crossing a polarizer.

x

y

k

x

y

k

x

y

PA

Page 19: Cosmic Microwave Backgrounddas.inpe.br/school/2011/lectures/PaolodeBernardis_Lecture2.pdf · Cosmic Microwave Background 2/5 Paolo de Bernardis Dipartimento di Fisica, Universita’

• The component of the incoming field orthogonal tothe PA is either absorbed or reflected, dependingon the perticular polarizer used.

• Note that

• So, for θ=45° incidence, half of the intensity istransmitted (and half is reflected or absorbed).

Linear Polarizers• The transmitted field E’ can

be computed projecting the incoming field E along the Principal Axis:

Ein

Eout, T

PA

x

y

φEout, Rφφ sincos yxpar EEE +=

( )( )⎪⎩

⎪⎨⎧

+==+==

φφφφφφ

sinsincoscossincos

,'

,'

yxypary

yxxparx

EEEEEEEE

θθ 22222 coscos'' IEEEI par ==== (Malus law)

θ

Page 20: Cosmic Microwave Backgrounddas.inpe.br/school/2011/lectures/PaolodeBernardis_Lecture2.pdf · Cosmic Microwave Background 2/5 Paolo de Bernardis Dipartimento di Fisica, Universita’

• At long wavelengths metallic wire gridsact as ideal polarizers:

• Radiation with E parallel to the wiresinduces a current in the wires, so the polarizer acts as a metallic mirror: radiation is fully reflected and is nottransmitted.

• Radiation with E orthogonal to the wires cannot induce a current in the wires, so it is transmitted.

• Radiation at a generic angle from the wires is partially transmitted(orthogonal component) and partiallyreflected (parallel component).

• If the spacing of the wires a and theirdiameter d are much less than the wavelength, the wire grid is very closeto an ideal polarizer, with its principalaxis orthogonal to the wires.

• Wire grid polarizers can be used as ideal beamsplitters for radiation at 45° wrt the wires: half of the intensity is transmitted, and half is reflected, without any wavelength dependance.

• Wire grids can be machined easilyusing a lathe and tungsten wire, whichis available in long coils.

E

E

Principal axis

Principal axis

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Page 22: Cosmic Microwave Backgrounddas.inpe.br/school/2011/lectures/PaolodeBernardis_Lecture2.pdf · Cosmic Microwave Background 2/5 Paolo de Bernardis Dipartimento di Fisica, Universita’

• In the Martin-Puplettconfiguration, radiation isprepared by the first polarizer, then is split by the second, and is recombined bythe third.

• There are two sources. The beam from source 1’ isreflected one time more thanthe beam from source 1.

• For each metallic reflectionthere is a 180° phase changeof the electric field, so the detector will measure the difference in spectralbrightness between source 1 and source 1’.

• The instrument becomes a zero instrument, comparingthe brightness of two sources(see later).

• In the case of FIRAS one source was the sky, the otherone was an internalblackbody.

Martin PuplettInterferometer

Page 23: Cosmic Microwave Backgrounddas.inpe.br/school/2011/lectures/PaolodeBernardis_Lecture2.pdf · Cosmic Microwave Background 2/5 Paolo de Bernardis Dipartimento di Fisica, Universita’

Martin Puplett Interferometer• Two input ports

and two output ports.

• Uses twounpolarizedsources, and twodetectorssensitive to the power.

• Let’s study the operationfollowing the beams.

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Martin Puplett Interferometer• The input polarizer

A reflects radiationfrom source S1’ and transmits radiationfrom S1

• Assume that the polarizer wires are horizontal (mainaxis of the polarizervertical)

• The beam at position 3 has a vertical componentfrom S1 and a horizontalcomponent from S1’.

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Martin Puplett Interferometer• The input polarizer

A reflects radiationfrom source S1’ and transmits radiationfrom S1

• Assume that the polarizer wires are horizontal (mainaxis of the polarizervertical)

• The beam at position 3 has a vertical componentfrom S1 and a horizontalcomponent from S1’.

Page 26: Cosmic Microwave Backgrounddas.inpe.br/school/2011/lectures/PaolodeBernardis_Lecture2.pdf · Cosmic Microwave Background 2/5 Paolo de Bernardis Dipartimento di Fisica, Universita’

Martin Puplett Interferometer• The wires of the

beamsplitter polarizerB are oriented to beseen by incomingradiation at 45o fromthe drawing plane.

• In this way, B reflectsa fraction of the vertical componentfrom S1 and a fractionof the horizontalcomponent from S1’ .

• So beam 4 will bepolarized at 45° and will consist of equalcontributions fromboth S1 e da S1.

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The beamsplitterpolarizer B reflects radiationfrom both sources

3

4

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Martin Puplett Interferometer

• In addition, B transmits a fractionof the verticalcomponent from S1and a fraction of the horizontalpolarization from S1’.

• So beam 4’ ispolarized at 45° and consists of equalcontributions fromboth S1 and S1’

Page 29: Cosmic Microwave Backgrounddas.inpe.br/school/2011/lectures/PaolodeBernardis_Lecture2.pdf · Cosmic Microwave Background 2/5 Paolo de Bernardis Dipartimento di Fisica, Universita’

The beamsplitter B transmits and reflects radiationfrom both sources

3

4

4’

Page 30: Cosmic Microwave Backgrounddas.inpe.br/school/2011/lectures/PaolodeBernardis_Lecture2.pdf · Cosmic Microwave Background 2/5 Paolo de Bernardis Dipartimento di Fisica, Universita’

Martin Puplett Interferometer• The roof mirror CD

reflects beam 4 intobeam 6 back to the beamsplitter B.

• A roof mirrror isused in place of a normal mirrorbecause it rotatesthe polarizationplane by 90o.

• In this way beam 6, which had beenreflected by B, nowis transmittedtowards the detectors.

Page 31: Cosmic Microwave Backgrounddas.inpe.br/school/2011/lectures/PaolodeBernardis_Lecture2.pdf · Cosmic Microwave Background 2/5 Paolo de Bernardis Dipartimento di Fisica, Universita’

A roof mirrorrotates the polarizationplane by 90o.

46

5

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Martin Puplett Interferometer

• In the same way the roof mirrorC’D’ reflects beam4’ back towardsthe beamsplitter(as 6’)

• The polarizationplane is rotatedby 90°, so thatbeam 6’, whichhad beentransmitted (as4’) now isreflected towardsthe detectors.

Page 33: Cosmic Microwave Backgrounddas.inpe.br/school/2011/lectures/PaolodeBernardis_Lecture2.pdf · Cosmic Microwave Background 2/5 Paolo de Bernardis Dipartimento di Fisica, Universita’

Martin Puplett Interferometer• The output polarizer G

has wires parallel to the drwaing plane.

• The rays coming from the beamsplitter, which are at 45°, have both horizontaland vertical components(coming from bothsources) so theycontribute to both the beams towards the detectors (bothtransmitted and reflected)

• In this way both detectorsreceive radiation fromboth sources, whichpassed through both the arms of the interferometer.

Page 34: Cosmic Microwave Backgrounddas.inpe.br/school/2011/lectures/PaolodeBernardis_Lecture2.pdf · Cosmic Microwave Background 2/5 Paolo de Bernardis Dipartimento di Fisica, Universita’

Martin Puplett Interferometer

• The fundamentaldifference is thatradiation from source S1’underwent 4 reflections, while radiation from S1 underwent only 3 reflections. Since eachreflection produces a 180°phase shift, the instrument measures the diffence betweeninterferograms producedby S1’ and S1

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Quantitative treatment: uses Jones Calculus

• Jonex matrices are used to describe linearlypolarized radiation (Jones 1941)

• The interaction of the E field of the EM wave withan optical component is described by a 2x2 matrix:

• They work only for fully polarized radiation. Forpartially polarized radiation one can use Mullercalculus (loosing any phase information).

⎟⎟⎠

⎞⎜⎜⎝

⎛⎟⎟⎠

⎞⎜⎜⎝

⎛=⎟⎟

⎞⎜⎜⎝

INy

INx

OUTy

OUTx

EE

JJJJ

EE

,

,

2221

1211

,

,

Page 36: Cosmic Microwave Backgrounddas.inpe.br/school/2011/lectures/PaolodeBernardis_Lecture2.pdf · Cosmic Microwave Background 2/5 Paolo de Bernardis Dipartimento di Fisica, Universita’

• If E is the amplitude of the electric field of the EMW, it is represented as in the following examples:

• Linear polarizationaligned along x axis

• Linear polarizationaligned along y axis

• 45° from x axis

• -45° from x axis

• Circular polarization(right)

• Circular polarization(left)

⎟⎟⎠

⎞⎜⎜⎝

⎛01

E

⎟⎟⎠

⎞⎜⎜⎝

⎛10

E

⎟⎟⎠

⎞⎜⎜⎝

⎛11

2E

⎟⎟⎠

⎞⎜⎜⎝

⎛−11

2E

⎟⎟⎠

⎞⎜⎜⎝

⎛− i

E 12

⎟⎟⎠

⎞⎜⎜⎝

⎛i

E 12

E field

Page 37: Cosmic Microwave Backgrounddas.inpe.br/school/2011/lectures/PaolodeBernardis_Lecture2.pdf · Cosmic Microwave Background 2/5 Paolo de Bernardis Dipartimento di Fisica, Universita’

Reference system

• Ideal single mirror, orthogonal to xz plane:

• Ideal roof mirror, orthogonalto xz plane:

⎟⎟⎠

⎞⎜⎜⎝

⎛−

=10

01M

⎟⎟⎠

⎞⎜⎜⎝

⎛=⎟⎟

⎞⎜⎜⎝

⎛−⎟⎟

⎞⎜⎜⎝

⎛−

=1001

1001

1001

RM

Mirrors

• Comoving withthe light beam :

x

y

z

y

x

z

mirror

k

k

Page 38: Cosmic Microwave Backgrounddas.inpe.br/school/2011/lectures/PaolodeBernardis_Lecture2.pdf · Cosmic Microwave Background 2/5 Paolo de Bernardis Dipartimento di Fisica, Universita’

Linear polarizers• Transmission :

Polarizer with horizontalprincipal axis:

• Transmission : Polarizer with verticalprincipal axis:

• Transmission : Polarizer with principalaxis at angle φ from x axis

• Reflection : Polarizerwith principal axis at angle φ from x axis

⎟⎟⎠

⎞⎜⎜⎝

⎛0001

⎟⎟⎠

⎞⎜⎜⎝

⎛1000

( ) ⎟⎟⎠

⎞⎜⎜⎝

⎛=

ϕϕϕϕϕϕ

ϕ 2

2

sinsincossincoscos

tP

Ein

Eout, T

PA

x

y

φ

( ) ⎟⎟⎠

⎞⎜⎜⎝

−−

=ϕϕϕ

ϕϕϕϕ 2

2

cossincossincossin

rP

Eout, R

Page 39: Cosmic Microwave Backgrounddas.inpe.br/school/2011/lectures/PaolodeBernardis_Lecture2.pdf · Cosmic Microwave Background 2/5 Paolo de Bernardis Dipartimento di Fisica, Universita’

Delay

• Introduced by an optical path differenceδ=4πσx : this is common for bothpolarizations, so

( ) ⎟⎟⎠

⎞⎜⎜⎝

⎛=

δ

δ

δ i

i

ee

D0

0

Page 40: Cosmic Microwave Backgrounddas.inpe.br/school/2011/lectures/PaolodeBernardis_Lecture2.pdf · Cosmic Microwave Background 2/5 Paolo de Bernardis Dipartimento di Fisica, Universita’

• The two sourcesS1 and S’1 , are described by Jonesvectors

• beam 3, after the input polarizer(with horizontalprincipal axis), is

⎟⎟⎠

⎞⎜⎜⎝

⎛=

y

x

AA

S1 ⎟⎟⎠

⎞⎜⎜⎝

⎛=

y

x

BB

S '1

⎟⎟⎠

⎞⎜⎜⎝

⎛−

=+=y

xrt B

ASPSPS '

113 )0()0(

Page 41: Cosmic Microwave Backgrounddas.inpe.br/school/2011/lectures/PaolodeBernardis_Lecture2.pdf · Cosmic Microwave Background 2/5 Paolo de Bernardis Dipartimento di Fisica, Universita’

• beam 4 (reflectedby the beamsplitter) and beam 4’(transmitted by the beamsplitter) willbe:

⎟⎟⎠

⎞⎜⎜⎝

⎛++

=⎟⎟⎠

⎞⎜⎜⎝

⎛−⎟⎟

⎞⎜⎜⎝

⎛−−

==yx

yx

y

xr BA

BAB

ASPS

21

1111

21)4/( 34 π

⎟⎟⎠

⎞⎜⎜⎝

⎛−−

=⎟⎟⎠

⎞⎜⎜⎝

⎛−⎟⎟

⎞⎜⎜⎝

⎛==

yx

yx

y

xt BA

BAB

ASPS

21

1111

21)4/( 3

'4 π

Page 42: Cosmic Microwave Backgrounddas.inpe.br/school/2011/lectures/PaolodeBernardis_Lecture2.pdf · Cosmic Microwave Background 2/5 Paolo de Bernardis Dipartimento di Fisica, Universita’

• Since roof mirrorsare represented byunity matrix, wehave also

⎟⎟⎠

⎞⎜⎜⎝

⎛++

==yx

yx

BABA

SS21

46

⎟⎟⎠

⎞⎜⎜⎝

−−

=⎟⎟⎠

⎞⎜⎜⎝

⎛−−

== δ

δ

iyx

iyx

yx

yx

eBAeBA

BABA

DDSS)()(

21

21'

4'6

• S6 is transmitted by the beamsplitter, while S6’ isreflected, so

'66

'668 11

1121

1111

21)4/3()4/( SSSPSPS rt ⎟⎟

⎞⎜⎜⎝

⎛−−

+⎟⎟⎠

⎞⎜⎜⎝

⎛=+= ππ

Page 43: Cosmic Microwave Backgrounddas.inpe.br/school/2011/lectures/PaolodeBernardis_Lecture2.pdf · Cosmic Microwave Background 2/5 Paolo de Bernardis Dipartimento di Fisica, Universita’

• So

⎟⎟⎠

⎞⎜⎜⎝

++−−−−+

=)1()1(

)1()1(21

8 δδ

δδ

iy

ix

iy

ix

eBeAeBeA

S

⎟⎟⎠

⎞⎜⎜⎝

⎛ −−+==

0)1()1(

21)0( 89

δδ iy

ix

teBeA

SPS

• After the interaction with the output beamsplitter the beams tothe detectors are

'66

'668 11

1121

1111

21)4/3()4/( SSSPSPS rt ⎟⎟

⎞⎜⎜⎝

⎛−−

+⎟⎟⎠

⎞⎜⎜⎝

⎛=+= ππ

⎟⎟⎠

⎞⎜⎜⎝

⎛+−−

==)1()1(

021)0( 8

'9 δδ i

yi

xr eBeA

SPS

Page 44: Cosmic Microwave Backgrounddas.inpe.br/school/2011/lectures/PaolodeBernardis_Lecture2.pdf · Cosmic Microwave Background 2/5 Paolo de Bernardis Dipartimento di Fisica, Universita’

• Now we can compute the power on the detectors:

• Both detectors measure a constant intensity (equal tohalf of the sum of the intensities from the twosources), plus a modulated intensity (modulated bythe optical path difference), whose amplitude is the difference of the spectra from the two sources.

• The interferogram is zero if the two sources havethe same spectrum.

δδδ cos22

)]cos1()cos1([21 2222

229

yxyxyx

BABABAI

−+

+=−++=

δδδ cos22

)]cos1()cos1([21 2222

22'9

yxyxyx

BABABAI

−−

+=++−=

→+= **yyxx EEEEI

Page 45: Cosmic Microwave Backgrounddas.inpe.br/school/2011/lectures/PaolodeBernardis_Lecture2.pdf · Cosmic Microwave Background 2/5 Paolo de Bernardis Dipartimento di Fisica, Universita’

( ) ( )[ ] [ ]{ } σπσσσσ dxrtSSCxI REFSKYSKY 4cos1)()(0

+−= ∫∞

( ) ( )[ ] [ ]{ } σπσσσσ dxrtSSCxI REFCALCAL 4cos1)()(0

+−= ∫∞

Page 46: Cosmic Microwave Backgrounddas.inpe.br/school/2011/lectures/PaolodeBernardis_Lecture2.pdf · Cosmic Microwave Background 2/5 Paolo de Bernardis Dipartimento di Fisica, Universita’

• To measure a few K blackbody, you need a cryogenic referenceblackbody, withvariable temperature. Otherwise you do notnull the signal.

• Practical design of a Blackbody cavity: seee.g. Quinn T.J., Martin J.E., (1985), Phil. Trans. R. Soc. Lond., A316, 85: who made a radiometric measurement of the Boltzmann constant (precise to 5 significant digits !)

Page 47: Cosmic Microwave Backgrounddas.inpe.br/school/2011/lectures/PaolodeBernardis_Lecture2.pdf · Cosmic Microwave Background 2/5 Paolo de Bernardis Dipartimento di Fisica, Universita’

FIRAS• The FIRAS guys were able to change the temperature of

the internal blackbody until the interferograms were flatzero.

• This is a null measurement, which is much more sensitive than an absolute one: (one can boost the gain without saturating !).

• This means that the difference between the spectrum of the sky and the spectrum of a blackbody is zero, i.e. the spectrum of the sky is a blackbody with the sametemperature as the internal reference blackbody.

• This also means that the internal blackbody is a realblackbody: it is unlikely that the sky can have the samedeviation from the Planck law as the source built in the lab.

Page 48: Cosmic Microwave Backgrounddas.inpe.br/school/2011/lectures/PaolodeBernardis_Lecture2.pdf · Cosmic Microwave Background 2/5 Paolo de Bernardis Dipartimento di Fisica, Universita’

σ (cm-1) wavenumber

Page 49: Cosmic Microwave Backgrounddas.inpe.br/school/2011/lectures/PaolodeBernardis_Lecture2.pdf · Cosmic Microwave Background 2/5 Paolo de Bernardis Dipartimento di Fisica, Universita’

• Isotropic expansionor contraction:For every observer :r = physical distanceχ = comoving distancea(t) = scale factor

• FRW metric: the most generalhomogenous isotropic metric

• 1/k2 = curvature of space• If we want to know how the universe expands, we need to

integrate the Einstein Field Equations

( ) ( ) ( )⎥⎥

⎢⎢

⎡−−

⎟⎟

⎜⎜

−−= 22

2

2

2222 sin1

)( ϕθχθχχ

χ ddk

dtadtcds

Tc

GG 4

8π−=

Curvature Tensor(derived from the metric of the universe)

Stress-energy tensor(describes the energycontent of the universe)

r1 (t) = χ1 a(t)

r2 (t) = χ2 a(t)

r3 (t) = χ3 a(t)

1

2

3

MW

Page 50: Cosmic Microwave Backgrounddas.inpe.br/school/2011/lectures/PaolodeBernardis_Lecture2.pdf · Cosmic Microwave Background 2/5 Paolo de Bernardis Dipartimento di Fisica, Universita’

Evolution of the scale factor• a(t) is the solution of the Friedmann equation, which is found from

Einstein’s field equations for a homogeneous isotropic medium, and can be rewritten:

• The solution a(t) depends on the different kinds of energy densitiesrelevant at the considered epoch. To integrate, we need the Ωs:

• The very first result is that the universe cannot be static: a=a(t). • From observations we know that the universe expands today, so a(t)

is growing today.• To say more on the previous and future behaviour of the scale factor

we need to estimate the cosmological parameters Ωi and Ho.• Cosmology recently entered in a “precision” phase, were the

cosmological parameters have been estimated with good precision. • Precision measurements of the CMB played a key role in this

process.

{ }Λ−−− Ω+Ω+Ω+Ω=⎟

⎠⎞

⎜⎝⎛ 2342

2

aaaHaa

KoMoRoo&

Radiation Matter Cosm. constantCurvature

GH o

ococ

oioi π

ρρρ

83;

2

,,

==Ω

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Radiation Phase• From Friedmann equation is evident that at early epochs (a small)

the expansion is driven by radiation:

• Note that the expansion rate tends to infinity at the beginning(near the Big Bang), and then decreases with time.

• In this phase the solution a (t) can be found analytically:

• We know Ho from Hubble’s law. ΩR has contributions from CMB photons, but also from all other relativistic particles present at earlyepochs. So the extrapolation using only the energy density of the CMB would not be precise.

{ } 4223422

−Λ

−−− Ω≈Ω+Ω+Ω+Ω=⎟⎠⎞

⎜⎝⎛ aHaaaH

aa

RooKoMoRoo&

{ } ( ) 2/12/12

2)(2

tHtatHaoRoRoo Ω=⇒Ω=

aa /&

Page 52: Cosmic Microwave Backgrounddas.inpe.br/school/2011/lectures/PaolodeBernardis_Lecture2.pdf · Cosmic Microwave Background 2/5 Paolo de Bernardis Dipartimento di Fisica, Universita’

log a(t)

log ρ(t)

3−= amom ρρ

4−= aror ρρ The radiation phase continues until the energydensity of radiation becomes comparable tothe energy density of non relativistic matter.

34 −− = eqMoRo aaeq ρρ

como

CMB

Mo

Ro cTaeqρ

σρρ

Ω≈=

34 /

5104 −×≈eqayt eq 2000≈

veryrough

log aeq(t)

Note: at the end of the radiation phase the temperature T=TCMB/a was still > 105 KThe universe was still ionized and opaque.

Page 53: Cosmic Microwave Backgrounddas.inpe.br/school/2011/lectures/PaolodeBernardis_Lecture2.pdf · Cosmic Microwave Background 2/5 Paolo de Bernardis Dipartimento di Fisica, Universita’

Matter Phase• When the energy of non.relativistic matter becomes

dominant

• In this phase the solution a (t) can be found analytically:

{ } 4223422

−Λ

−−− Ω≈Ω+Ω+Ω+Ω=⎟⎠⎞

⎜⎝⎛ aHaaaH

aa

MooKoMoRoo&

3/22/32/3 )(

23)()(

32

⎟⎠⎞

⎜⎝⎛ +−Ω=⇒−Ω= oooMoomoo

a

a

attHtattHao

a(t)

Hot

t1/2

t2/3 From this equation we can estimate howlong it took to go from a=10-5 (end of radiation phase) to a=10-3

(recombination).

The result is 380000 years.This number is important for the following.

Page 54: Cosmic Microwave Backgrounddas.inpe.br/school/2011/lectures/PaolodeBernardis_Lecture2.pdf · Cosmic Microwave Background 2/5 Paolo de Bernardis Dipartimento di Fisica, Universita’

time

Distance between

two positions

At the very beginning, the physical distancebetween two positions r(t)=χa(t) increasedat a rate larger than the speed of light. Afterwards, the expansion rate decreased.

The result is the presence of causal horizons in the Universe

{ } ( ) 2/12/12)( tHta oRoΩ=

r(t)=χa(t)

422

−Ω≈⎟⎠⎞

⎜⎝⎛ aH

aa

Roo& 42

2−Ω≈⎟

⎠⎞

⎜⎝⎛ aH

aa

Moo&

3/22/3)(

23)( ⎟

⎠⎞

⎜⎝⎛ +−Ω= oooMo attHta

Page 55: Cosmic Microwave Backgrounddas.inpe.br/school/2011/lectures/PaolodeBernardis_Lecture2.pdf · Cosmic Microwave Background 2/5 Paolo de Bernardis Dipartimento di Fisica, Universita’

Expansion vs Horizon

time

Distance travelledby light since the big bang

Distance betweentwo observersr(t)=χ12 a(t)

r(t)=ct

At this time the two observers seeeachother

At this time the two observers do not see eachother: they are separated by a causal horizon.

Page 56: Cosmic Microwave Backgrounddas.inpe.br/school/2011/lectures/PaolodeBernardis_Lecture2.pdf · Cosmic Microwave Background 2/5 Paolo de Bernardis Dipartimento di Fisica, Universita’

Horizons at recombination

time

Distance travelledby light since the big bang Distance between

two observersr(t)=χ12 a(t)

r(t)=ct

Conversely, at any given time, there is a physical separationbetween observers which marks the causal horizon: observers more distant than this separation did not have enough time to exchangelight signals. They are causally disconnected.

A generic time tx

Page 57: Cosmic Microwave Backgrounddas.inpe.br/school/2011/lectures/PaolodeBernardis_Lecture2.pdf · Cosmic Microwave Background 2/5 Paolo de Bernardis Dipartimento di Fisica, Universita’

Horizons at recombination

time

Distance travelledby light since the big bang Distance between

two observersr(t)=χ12 a(t)

r(t)=ct

Observers more distant than this separation did not have enoughtime to exchange light signals. They are causally disconnected. Observers closer than this separation have been in causal contact.

Distance between twoobservers entering the horizon at txr(t)=χ34 a(t)

A generic time tx

Page 58: Cosmic Microwave Backgrounddas.inpe.br/school/2011/lectures/PaolodeBernardis_Lecture2.pdf · Cosmic Microwave Background 2/5 Paolo de Bernardis Dipartimento di Fisica, Universita’

Horizon• The physical phenomena happening within

the causal horizon ar different from the phenomena at scales outside the horizon.

• Forces are transmitted at most at the speedof light, so phenomena outside the causalhorizon are frozen until they enter the horizon.

• We should be able to see the effects of causal horizons, impressed in the image of the CMB.

Page 59: Cosmic Microwave Backgrounddas.inpe.br/school/2011/lectures/PaolodeBernardis_Lecture2.pdf · Cosmic Microwave Background 2/5 Paolo de Bernardis Dipartimento di Fisica, Universita’

Horizons• At recombination (t=380000 years), only regions of the

Universe closer than 380000 light years have had the possibility (enough time) to interact.

• They might be very different, since they could notinteract during all the previous history of the Universe, from the Big Bang to recombination !

• However, measurements show that this is not the case.• CMB anisotropy measurements.

T1

T2

3800

00 ly

3800

00 ly

14 000 000 000 ly

10°

• That length, as seen from a distance of the order of c/Ho = 14 Glyrs, has an angularsize of about 1 degree.

Page 60: Cosmic Microwave Backgrounddas.inpe.br/school/2011/lectures/PaolodeBernardis_Lecture2.pdf · Cosmic Microwave Background 2/5 Paolo de Bernardis Dipartimento di Fisica, Universita’

Measuringanisotropy

• Anisotropy means thatbrightness is a function of the observed direction.

• Large brightness variationswould be evident in a map.

• However, since its discovery, it was evident that the CMB isa very isotropic background.

• At a few mm of wavelength, the brightness of the sky isdominated by the CMB, and isisotropic to at least 1 partover 100.

• Only if we remove the average brightness and increase the contrast of the image, we start to seestructures.

• But this requires special experimental configurations, removing a large background an enhancing smallfluctuations.

Page 61: Cosmic Microwave Backgrounddas.inpe.br/school/2011/lectures/PaolodeBernardis_Lecture2.pdf · Cosmic Microwave Background 2/5 Paolo de Bernardis Dipartimento di Fisica, Universita’

Measuring anisotropy• A way to remove the

common-mode signalis to alternate on the detector twocontiguous regions of the sky, and measurethe AC signalremoving the DC signal electronically.

• A small AC signalsynchronous to the modulation can beextracted fromdetector noise using a demodulationtechnique (a lock-inamplifier).

Lock-in

In ref.

In S.

Out

Toward

s skyreg

ionA

Towards skyreg

ion B

detector

wobblingmirror

Page 62: Cosmic Microwave Backgrounddas.inpe.br/school/2011/lectures/PaolodeBernardis_Lecture2.pdf · Cosmic Microwave Background 2/5 Paolo de Bernardis Dipartimento di Fisica, Universita’

• Using a modulation/demodulationtechnique has 3 purposes:

• Remove the common mode signal (instrumentaland atmospheric emission– to first order)

• Remove noise at frequencies different fromthe modulation frequency

• Produce a signalproportional to the Difference of Brightnessbetween the two observedregions.

Lock-in

Lock-in

In ref.

In S.

Out

Toward

s skyreg

ionA

Towards skyreg

ion B

detector

wobblingmirror

( ))()1( ABtBtBERAP satmatmosphatminstrA +−+Ω=( ))()1( BBtBtBERAP satmatmosphatminstrB +−+Ω=

{ })()( BBABERtAP ssatm −Ω=Δ

Page 63: Cosmic Microwave Backgrounddas.inpe.br/school/2011/lectures/PaolodeBernardis_Lecture2.pdf · Cosmic Microwave Background 2/5 Paolo de Bernardis Dipartimento di Fisica, Universita’

t

ASBS

Lock-in

t

1+

1−

Signal from detector

Reference signal from modulator (wobbling mirror)

BA SS −Signal times Reference

t

Lock-in

In ref.

In S.

Out

[ ]BABAout SSSStRtSS −=−×+×== 21

21

21 11)()(

In ref.

In S.

X Out∫T

dttVT 0

)(1

Offset due to common-mode emission

A:

B:

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Lock-in

In presence of noise :

Lock-in

In ref.

In S.

Out

[ ]

[ ] '1)(1)(11

)()()(

21

21

21

21

21

nSStntnSS

tRtntSS

BA

BA

out

+−=

=−×+×+−×+×=

=+=

In ref.

In S.

X Out∫T

dttVT 0

)(1

n’ is a zero-average noise: due to the lack of correlationbetween n(t) and R(t), n’ tends to 0 if the average period islong enough (many modulation cycles). To quantify, we need to specify the noise better.

The combination multiplier + integrator is equivalent to a band-pass filter centered on the reference frequency.

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• Let’s consider for simplicity a sine-wave signal :

• The signal from the sky will be at the same frequency of the reference, while the noise will have contributions at allfrequencies.

• The reference also can be a sine-wave at the same frequency asthe signal:

• At the output of the multiplier we get

• If the low-pass filter has a cut-off frequency lower thanfc=1/T<2π/ω, the sum frequency will be cut, while the differencefrequency will pass with an amplitude

• Where H is the tranfer function of the low-pass filter.

)cos()( sss tVtS ϕω +=

)cos()( RRttR ϕω +=

[ ] [ ])()(cos)()(cos)( RsRssRsRssp tVtVtV ϕϕωωϕϕωω −+−++++=

)cos( RsRss HV ϕϕωω −−

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)( RSSout HVV ωω −=

)( RSH ωω −)( RSH ωω +−

outV

The sky signal is exactly at the samefrequency as the reference, with no phase delay, so it is transferred tothe output as it is.

Noise contributes to all frequencies, but only those within the bandpassΔω=2(2πfc)=4π/T will contribute tothe output signal.

In case of wide-band noise the improvement in S/N is verysignificant !

0

Δω

sV

Page 67: Cosmic Microwave Backgrounddas.inpe.br/school/2011/lectures/PaolodeBernardis_Lecture2.pdf · Cosmic Microwave Background 2/5 Paolo de Bernardis Dipartimento di Fisica, Universita’

max

max

2//

2;

TfNSNS

TwNfwN

in

out

VoutVin

=

==

If wV is the spectral density of the noise (in V2/Hz) :

Page 68: Cosmic Microwave Backgrounddas.inpe.br/school/2011/lectures/PaolodeBernardis_Lecture2.pdf · Cosmic Microwave Background 2/5 Paolo de Bernardis Dipartimento di Fisica, Universita’

Early measurements of CMB anisotropy

at scales of the order of the horizon. So regions which have neverbeen in causal contact before produce the same CMB brightness, withoutstanding precision. How is this possible ? This is the paradox of horizons.

410−<ΔTT

• Using the beam-switching technique described above, you can integrate for some time on one couple of directions, then changedirections and integrate again, then change … until you get a statistical sample of the sky, consisting typically in a few tens to a few hundreds sky temperature differences ΔTi .

• This is enough to estimate the rms fluctuation of the temperature (brightness) of the sky, extracting it from the noise.

• These experiments started immediately after the discovery of the CMB (Penzias and Wilson stated in the discovery paper of 1965 that it was isotropic to 10%)… and were very frustrating !

• For more than two decades a few groups of pioneers of the CMB improved their isotropometers, obtaining increasingly stringentupper limits for the anisotropy of the CMB, down to a level