Overview
The energy spectrum of the CMB is extremely close to that of a perfect blackbody with a temperature of . This is expected because in the early Universe matter and radiation are in thermal equilibrium. However, atHistory
The first considerations of spectral distortions to the CMB go back to the early days of CMB cosmology starting with the seminal papers of Yakov B. Zeldovich and Rashid Sunyaev in 1969 and 1970. These works appeared just a few years after the first detection of the CMB byThermalisation physics
In the cosmological 'thermalization problem', three main eras are distinguished: the thermalization or temperature-era, the -era and the -era, each with slightly different physical conditions due to the change in the density and temperature of particles caused by the Hubble expansion.Thermalization era
In the very early stages of cosmic history (up until a few months after the-distortion era
At redshifts between and , efficient energy exchange through Compton scattering continues to establish kinetic equilibrium between matter and radiation, but photon number changing processes stop being efficient. Since the photon number density is conserved but the energy density is modified, photons gain an effective non-zero chemical potential, acquiring a Bose-Einstein distribution. This distinct type of distortion is called -distortion after the chemical potential known from standard thermodynamics. The value for the chemical potential can be estimated by combining the photon energy density and number density constraints from before and after the energy injection. This yields the well-known expression, where determines the total energy that is injected into the CMB photon field. With respect to the equilibrium blackbody spectrum, the -distortion is characterized by a deficit of photons at low frequencies and an increment at high frequencies. The distortion changes sign at a frequency of , allowing us to distinguish it observationally from the -type distortion. -distortion signals can be created by decaying particles, evaporating primordial black holes, primordial magnetic fields and other non-standard physics examples. Within CDM cosmology, the adiabatic cooling of matter and dissipation of acoustic waves set up by inflation cause a -distortion with . This signal can be used as a powerful test for inflation, as it is sensitive to the amplitude of density fluctuations at scales corresponding to physical scales of (i.e., dwarf galaxies). By combining COBE’s measurements of the large-scale CMB anisotropies with the -distortion constraint, the first limits on the small-scale power spectrum could be obtained well-before direct measurements became possible-distortion era
At redshifts , also Compton scattering becomes inefficient. The plasma has a temperature of , such that CMB photons are boosted via non-relativistic Compton scattering, giving rise to a -distortion. Again, by considering the total energetics of the problem and using photon number conservation, one can obtain the estimate The name for the -distortion simply stems from the choice of dimensionless variables in the seminal paper of Zeldovich and Sunyaev, 1969. There, the energy injection caused by the hot electrons residing inside clusters of galaxies was considered and the associated effect is more commonly referred to as the thermal Sunyaev-Zeldovich (SZ) effect. Like for the -distortion, in principle many non-standard physics examples can cause -type distortions. However, the largest contribution to the all-sky -distortion stems from the cumulative cluster SZ signal, which provides a way to constrain the amount of hot gas in the Universe. While at , the cosmic plasma on average has a low temperature, electrons inside galaxy clusters can reach temperatures of a few keV. In this case, the scattering electrons can have speeds of , such that relativistic corrections to the Compton process become relevant. These relativistic corrections carry information of electron temperatures which can be used as a measure for the cluster energetics.Beyond and distortions
The classical studies mainly considered energy release (i.e., heating) as a source of distortions. However, recent work has shown that richer signals can be created by direct photon injection and non-thermal electron populations, both processes that appear in connection with decaying or annihilating particles. Similarly, it was demonstrated that the transition between the and -eras is more gradual and that the distortion shape is not simply given by a sum of - and . All these effects could allow us to differentiate observationally between a wide range of scenarios, as additional time-dependent information can be extracted.Cosmological recombination radiation (CRR)
About 280,000 years after the Big Bang, electrons and protons became bound into electrically neutral atoms as the Universe expanded. In cosmology, this is known as recombination and preludes the decoupling of the CMB photons from matter before they free stream throughout the Universe around 380,000 years after the Big Bang. Within the energy levels of hydrogen and helium atoms, various interactions take place, both collisional and radiative. The line emission arising from these processes is injected into the CMB, showing as small distortions to the CMB blackbody commonly referred to as the cosmological recombination radiation (CRR). The specific spectral shape of this distortion is directly related to the redshift at which this emission takes place, freezing the distortion in time over the microwave frequency bands. Since the distortion signal arises from the hydrogen and two helium recombination eras, this gives us a unique probe of the pre-recombination Universe that allows us to peek behind the last scattering surface that we observe using the CMB anisotropies. It gives us a unique way to constrain the primordial amount of helium in the early Universe, before recombination, and measure the early expansion rate.Experimental and observational challenges
The expected Lambda-CDM (LCDM) distortion signals are small – The largest distortion, arising from the cumulative flux of all hot gas in the Universe, has an amplitude that is about one order of magnitude below the limits of COBE/FIRAS. While this is considered to be an ‘easy’ target, the cosmological recombination radiation (CRR), as the smallest expected signal, has an amplitude that is another factor of smaller. All LCDM distortions are furthermore obscured by large Galactic and extragalactic foreground emissions (e.g., dust, synchrotron and free-free emission, cosmic infrared background), and for observations from the ground or balloons, atmospheric emission poses another hurdle to overcome. A detection of the LCDM distortions therefore requires novel experimental approaches that provide unprecedented sensitivity, spectral coverage, control of systematics and the capabilities to accurately remove foregrounds. Building on the design of FIRAS and experience with ARCADE, this has led to several spectrometer concepts to observe from space (PIXIE, PRISM, PRISTINE, SuperPIXIE and Voyage2050), balloon (BISOU) and the ground (APSERa and Cosmo at Dome-C, TMS at Teide Observatory). These are all designed to reach important milestones towards a detection of CMB distortions. As an ultimate frontier, a full characterization and exploitation of the cosmological recombination signal could be achieved by using a coordinated international experimental campaign, potentially including an observatory on the moon In June 2021, theSee also
References
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