KICP seminar: Selim Hotinli (Johns Hopkins University)

12:00–1:00 pm ERC 401

Selim Hotinli (Johns Hopkins University) "Fundamental physics from remote velocity and quadrupole reconstruction with the cosmic microwave background and galaxy surveys"

Next generation cosmic microwave background (CMB) experiments and galaxy surveys will generate a wealth of new data with unprecedented precision on small scales. Correlations between CMB anisotropies and the galaxy density carry valuable cosmological information about the largest scales, creating novel opportunities for inference. It is possible to foresee a cosmological paradigm shift, in which reconstruction of the gravitational weak-lensing potential, velocity fields and the remote quadrupole field will provide the most precise tests of fundamental physics. The use of the second-order effects in the CMB to extract this information motivate a strong push towards low noise, high resolution frontiers of the upcoming fourth generation CMB experiments. In this colloquium, I will discuss the prospects to use small-scale kinetic and polarized Sunyaev Zel’dovich effects and the moving-lens effect, in cross-correlation with ongoing galaxy surveys, to extract cosmological information.

Event Type

Seminars

Apr 28