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Rotation of the Cosmic Microwave Background Polarization from Weak Gravitational Lensing

Liang Dai
Phys. Rev. Lett. 112, 041303 – Published 28 January 2014

Abstract

When a cosmic microwave background (CMB) photon travels from the surface of last scatter through spacetime metric perturbations, the polarization vector may rotate about its direction of propagation. This gravitational rotation is distinct from, and occurs in addition to, the lensing deflection of the photon trajectory. This rotation can be sourced by linear vector or tensor metric perturbations and is fully coherent with the curl deflection field. Therefore, lensing corrections to the CMB polarization power spectra as well as the temperature-polarization cross correlations due to nonscalar perturbations are modified. The rotation does not affect lensing by linear scalar perturbations, but needs to be included when calculations go to higher orders. We present complete results for weak lensing of the full-sky CMB power spectra by general linear metric perturbations, taking into account both deflection of the photon trajectory and rotation of the polarization. For the case of lensing by gravitational waves, we show that the B modes induced by the rotation largely cancel those induced by the curl component of deflection.

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  • Received 13 November 2013

DOI:https://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevLett.112.041303

© 2014 American Physical Society

Authors & Affiliations

Liang Dai

  • Department of Physics and Astronomy, Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, Maryland 21218, USA

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Issue

Vol. 112, Iss. 4 — 31 January 2014

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