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A Flat Universe from High-Resolution Maps of the Cosmic Microwave Background Radiation

Abstract:
The blackbody radiation left over from the Big Bang has been transformed by the expansion of the Universe into the nearly isotropic 2.73K Cosmic Microwave Background. Tiny inhomogeneities in the early Universe left their imprint on the microwave background in the form of small anisotropies in its temperature. These anisotropies contain information about basic cosmological parameters, particularly the total energy density and curvature of the universe. Here we report the first images of resolved structure in the microwave background anisotropies over a significant part of the sky. Maps at four frequencies clearly distinguish the microwave background from foreground emission. We compute the angular power spectrum of the microwave background, and find a peak at Legendre multipole $\ell_{peak}=(197 \pm 6)$, with an amplitude $DT_{200}=(69 \pm 8)\mu K$. This is consistent with that expected for cold dark matter models in a flat (euclidean) Universe, as favoured by standard inflationary scenarios.

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Publisher copy:
10.1038/35010035

Authors


Journal:
Nature More from this journal
Volume:
404
Pages:
955-959
Publication date:
2000-04-28
DOI:


Keywords:
Pubs id:
pubs:208069
UUID:
uuid:f63c61f0-c45c-4334-84ff-b448363aa915
Local pid:
pubs:208069
Source identifiers:
208069
Deposit date:
2012-12-19
ARK identifier:

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