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Non-standard signatures from CMB polarisation with an insight into the new technological challenges

Sede A. Riccò Via Santa Sofia 78, Catania

In this seminar, I will focus on non-standard signatures from CMB polarisation that may indicate the existence of new phenomena beyond the standard models of cosmology and particle physics, from both theoretical and observational perspectives. ESA's Planck mission has observed CMB temperature anisotropies at the cosmic variance limit, but polarisation remains to be further investigated. CMB polarisation data are important not only because they contribute to provide tighter constraints on cosmological parameters but also because they allow the study of physical processes that would be excluded if only the CMB temperature maps were considered. I use polarisation data into account to assess the statistical significance of the anomalies currently observed only in the CMB temperature map, and to constrain the Cosmic Birefringence (CB) effect, which is expected in parity-violating extensions of the standard electromagnetism.
Measuring CMB polarisation is technically challenging because the polarised signal is much fainter than the temperature signal, and accurate polarisation estimates require exquisite control of systematic effects. To investigate the impact of spurious signals in upcoming CMB polarisation experiments, I present a study of the interplay between half-wave plate (HWP) non-idealities and the beams of the instrument for the next generation of CMB experiments, with an insight into how this instrumental contamination affects the measurement of the cosmic birefringence effect.

The Nature of Polarized Sources in the MIGHTEE XMM-LSS Deep Field

Sede A. Riccò Via Santa Sofia 78, Catania

This study explores the polarized emission of the faint extragalactic radio sources in the MIGHTEE (MeerKAT International Giga-Hertz Tiered Extragalactic Exploration, Jarvis et al., 2016) survey in order to systematically study cosmic magnetic fields in galaxies to high redshift. Reaching a sensitivity of 1.5 µJy/beam at a resolution of 5 arcseconds, MIGHTEE is providing an opportunity to chart the evolution of polarized emission from distant galaxies over cosmic time.
The MIGHTEE survey detects polarized emission for a large number of radio sources down to total intensity flux densities of the order of 100 µJy. At these flux densities the source population is increasingly dominated by star-forming galaxies (SFGs) as opposed to active galactic nuclei (AGNs). While polarized emission of AGN can be traced to very distant galaxies, polarized emission of SFGs at moderate distance has been detected only once.
I use multi-wavelength criteria to classify MIGHTEE radio objects as either SFG or AGN. I perform Rotation Measure Synthesis (RMSY) on the spectro-polarimetric data cubes and use the polarization and RMSY spectra to search for polarized emission. A comparative analysis of the polarization properties of SFGs and AGNs is performed. The analysis is extended to the lowest possible flux densities using stacking techniques. I will show preliminary results of the MeerKAT polarization studies of radio sources down to a sensitivity at the micro-Jansky level.