Cosmic Inflation: Temperature fluctuations

First direct evidence of cosmic inflation / BICEP2 Collaboration
March 18, 2014
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Temperature fluctuations
First direct evidence of cosmic inflation / BICEP2 Collaboration

The tiny temperature fluctuations of the cosmic microwave background (shown here as color) trace primordial density fluctuations in the early universe that seed the later growth of galaxies. These fluctuations produce a pattern of polarization in the CMB that has no twisting to it. Gravitational waves from inflation are expected to produce much a fainter pattern that includes twisting ("B-mode") polarization, consistent with the B-mode polarization pattern observed by BICEP2, which is shown here as black lines. The line segments show the polarization strength and orientation at different spots on the sky. (Harvard-Smithsonian Astrophysical Observatory / BICEP2 Collaboration)