Masters Degrees (Applied Mathematics)
Permanent URI for this collectionhttps://hdl.handle.net/10413/7108
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Browsing Masters Degrees (Applied Mathematics) by Subject "Big bang theory."
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Item Weak gravitational lensing in the cosmic microwave background : reconstructing the lensing convergence.(2012) Ridl, Jethro Venn.; Moodley, Kavilan.Many of the most significant constraints on the standard model of Cosmology describing the origins, contents and evolution of the Universe arise from the Cosmic Microwave Background (CMB). As we enter an era of precision cosmology, with more sensitive and higher angular resolution ground, balloon and space-based experiments, it is becoming increasingly important to understand the small-scale secondary anisotropies of the CMB. One of the most important of these secondary anisotropies comes from weak gravitational lensing, whereby free-streaming CMB photons are deflected by the gravitational potentials in the large-scale structure of the Universe. This has several important effects including modifications to the CMB power spectrum, the introduction of non-Gaussianities and the generation of B-mode polarization. In principle it is possible to reconstruct the the projection of the gravitational potential on the celestial sphere directly from observations of the CMB temperature anisotropies by examining the distinctive non-Gaussian signature the gravitational lensing imparts on to the CMB. This reconstructed map can be used to constrain the amplitude of the mass fluctuations in the early Universe and contains significant information regarding the dark matter distribution throughout the Universe. After a review of the standard Big Bang cosmological model the phenomenon of gravitational lensing is introduced. Equations for the deflection angle and lensing convergence are derived, as well as their power spectra, and the effect that gravitational lensing has on the CMB is discussed. In the main part of the thesis we study two methods for reconstructing the lensing convergence, the standard harmonic space quadratic estimator and a second estimator which is defined in real space. Each of the estimators is derived and implemented to recover reconstructed lensing convergence maps. The various biases that are inherent in the estimators is discussed, including details of how these biases can be removed. The performance of each of the estimators in reconstructing the lensing convergence is evaluated and contrasted. The final part of this thesis involves an analysis of a non-linear bias which affects both the harii monic space and real space estimators, resulting from a break down of the linear approximation, which arises if the lensing field has a sufficiently large magnitude. The effect of the non-linear bias on the reconstructed lensing field is evaluated, and comparison of these results with the reconstructed lensing amplitude from the Atacama Cosmology Telescope (ACT) and the South Pole Telescope (SPT) lensing measurement provides an estimate for the level of importance of the non-linear bias.