Beyond Optical Depth: Future Determination of Ionization History from the Cosmic Microwave Background

Astrophys J. 2020 Feb 1;889(2):130. doi: 10.3847/1538-4357/ab5fd5. Epub 2020 Jan 30.

Abstract

We explore the fundamental limits to which reionization histories can be constrained using only large-scale cosmic microwave background (CMB) anisotropy measurements. The redshift distribution of the fractional ionization x e (z) affects the angular distribution of CMB polarization. We project constraints on the reionization history of the universe using low-noise full-sky temperature and E-mode measurements of the CMB. We show that the measured TE power spectrum, C ^ TE , has roughly one quarter of the constraining power of C ^ EE on the reionization optical depth τ, and its addition improves the precision on τ by 20% over using C ^ EE only. We also use a two-step reionization model with an additional high-redshift step, parameterized by an early ionization fraction x e min , and a late reionization step at z re. We find that future high signal-to-noise measurements of the multipoles 10 ⩽ < 20 are especially important for breaking the degeneracy between x e min and z re. In addition, we show that the uncertainties on these parameters determined from a map with sensitivity 10 μK arcmin are less than 5% larger than the uncertainties in the noiseless case, making this noise level a natural target for future large sky area E-mode measurements.

Keywords: Cosmic background radiation (317); Cosmological parameters (338); Cosmology (343); Reionization (1383).