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Posts by Johannes R. Eskilt

Here is my prediction for 2026:
Another CMB experiment will find isotropic cosmic birefringence at 3+sigma, and the world will start taking cosmic birefringence very seriously

3 months ago 3 0 0 0

2) You can't blame dust! LFI and WMAP has negligible amount of dust. And ACT measurements do not use the foreground to calibrate. Hence, dust EB will again have a small impact on the measured birefringence angle.

6 months ago 0 0 0 0

1) It is not just Planck HFI that favors a non-zero birefringence angle. Planck LFI, WMAP and ACT also increase the significance (all towards a positive value).

6 months ago 1 0 1 0
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I've spent three days now making a plot that would summarize the past 10 years of cosmic birefringence research

Different datasets with widely different systematics (astrophysical + instrumental) favor a positive and non-zero cosmic birefringence angle! Excited to fill in more colors in the future!

6 months ago 2 0 1 1
[APCTP Colloquium] Parity Violation in Cosmology | Prof. Eiichiro Komatsu
[APCTP Colloquium] Parity Violation in Cosmology | Prof. Eiichiro Komatsu YouTube video by APCTP

He already gave a talk on the results! youtu.be/vvxSsnZivTQ?...

7 months ago 1 0 0 0

Currently at 4.6sigma, so we are not far from crossing it!

bsky.app/profile/joha...

7 months ago 2 0 2 0
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Combining these results, we get 4.6 sigma. Getting close to 5 sigma!
Graph credit: E. Komatsu

7 months ago 6 0 0 1
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In 2022, we were very excited to see 3.6sigma evidence of Cosmic Birefringence in Planck+WMAP. We've been waiting for confirmation from other experiments since, and now we are slowly getting it!

New paper is finding 2.9sigma evidence in ACT DR6. This is getting serious!
arxiv.org/abs/2509.13654

7 months ago 68 13 7 4
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ACT's 2.5sigma cosmic birefringence measurement should not be viewed in isolation. Combining their measurement with previous WMAP+Planck result increases the significance to 4+ sigma (assuming Gaussian dist+independent measurements).

Graph credit: E. Komatsu

1 year ago 0 0 0 0

With Planck+WMAP, we reached 3.6 sigma. If another CMB experiment with different systematics and people doing the analysis reaches the same significance, I won't just be excited, I'll actually believe cosmic birefringence is real. But I might just be young and naive ๐Ÿ˜…

1 year ago 1 0 1 0
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I would expect you to be more excited about their 2.5 sigma birefringence results! It's a bit hidden, but they find a birefringence angle of 0.20 \pm 0.08 deg (Eq 14 in act.princeton.edu/sites/g/file...). Very consistent with our Planck+WMAP results! arxiv.org/abs/2205.13962

1 year ago 3 0 1 0
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Although #ACT DR6s headline is that LCDM is still king, they do find a 2.5 sigma of an unexplained polarization angle (aka cosmic birefringence)! I am amazed that people are not more excited by this! Their beta = 0.20 \pm 0.08 is very consistent with our Planck+WMAP results! arxiv.org/abs/2205.13962

1 year ago 6 1 1 1