![Investigating cosmic origin and evolution with CMB-S4](/sites/default/files/styles/card/public/2024-04/Image%201.png?h=7d61246d&itok=aupOYpxl)
Investigating cosmic origin and evolution with CMB-S4
Prof. Zeeshan Ahmed, SLAC National Accelerator Laboratory
Abstract: The red-hot glow of the primordial universe, after 13.8 billion years of redshift, is observed today by our telescopes as the Cosmic Microwave Background (CMB). Spatial variations of CMB intensity and polarization across the sky provide a record of conditions in the early universe, possibly encoding signatures from cosmic inflation and traces of undiscovered relic particles. Additionally, the CMB ‘backlights’ the universe’s large-scale structure and picks up the influence of all matter, including neutrinos, on its way to us. Ground-based CMB imaging instrumentation has made generational leaps in sensitivity over the past few decades, while our understanding and mitigation of systematic errors in CMB measurements has advanced. CMB-S4 is the largest conceived ground-based CMB experiment that will map over 40% of the Southern sky from Chile and Antarctica in the 2030s. It will conduct the most sensitive search yet for inflation, complement DESI and LSST in aiding our understanding of cosmic acceleration, and enhance studies of neutrinos and dark matter from other experimental efforts. CMB-S4 has garnered broad support from the physics and astronomy communities as indicated by endorsements from the Astro2020 Decadal Survey, and most recently as the top-ranked DOE HEP project in the 2023 P5 report. I will discuss the motivation and design for the CMB-S4 experiment, highlighting current R&D effort at SLAC and KIPAC. In particular, ongoing research and findings from contemporary experiments such as BICEP, South Pole Telescope and Simons Observatory play a critical role in informing prototypes and optimizing design and methods for CMB-S4 to achieve its ambitious science goals.
About Prof. Zeeshan Ahmed
![Zeeshan Ahmed](/sites/default/files/styles/medium/public/2024-04/Zeeshan%20Ahmed%20Photo.jpg?itok=MGPPCW72)
Prof. Zeeshan Ahmed is an observational cosmologist at the Kavli Institute for Particle Astrophysics and Cosmology and SLAC National Accelerator Laboratory. He works on building CMB experiments and analyzing data from them. He received his PhD from Caltech in 2012 where he worked on the CDMS-II WIMP search experiment. He then became interested in searches for cosmic inflation and joined the BICEP collaboration, playing a major role in the construction and world-leading results from BICEP3 located at the South Pole. More recently, he led the team that designed and built the detector readout systems for the Simons Observatory in the Chilean Andes, and is preparing to study CMB weak lensing by large scale structure using Simons Observatory data. Ahmed joined SLAC as Panofsky Fellow in 2015, became Lead Scientist in Fundamental Physics Directorate in 2020, and Associate Professor in Particle Physics and Astrophysics in 2023.
Audience: