Abstract
Abstract
Upcoming cosmic microwave background (CMB) experiments are expected to detect new signals
probing interaction of CMB photons with intervening large-scale structure. Among these the
moving-lens effect, the CMB temperature anisotropy induced by cosmological structures moving
transverse to our line of sight, is anticipated to be measured to high significance in the near
future. In this paper, we investigate two possible strategies for the detection of this signal:
pairwise transverse-velocity estimation and oriented stacking. We expand on previous studies by
including in the analysis realistic simulations of competing signals and foregrounds. We confirm
that the moving lens effect can be detected at ≥ 10σ level by a combination of CMB-S4 and
LSST surveys. We show that the limiting factors in the detection depend on the strategy: for the
stacking analysis, correlated extragalactic foregrounds, namely the cosmic infrared background and
thermal Sunyaev Zel'dovich effect, play the most important role. The addition of foregrounds make
the signal-to-noise ratio be most influenced by large and nearby objects. As for the pairwise
detection, halo lensing and pair number counts are the main issues. In light of our findings, we
elaborate on possible strategies to improve the analysis approach for the moving lens detection
with upcoming experiments. We also deliver to the community all the simulations and tools we
developed for this study.
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