Abstract

We analyze first-year data of WMAP to determine the significance of asymmetry in summed power between arbitrarily defined opposite hemispheres, using maps that we create ourselves with software developed independently of the WMAP team. We find that over the multipole range l=[2,64], the significance of asymmetry is ~ 10^-4, a value insensitive to both frequency and power spectrum. We determine the smallest multipole ranges exhibiting significant asymmetry, and find twelve, including l=[2,3] and [6,7], for which the significance -> 0. In these ranges there is an improbable association between the direction of maximum significance and the ecliptic plane (p ~ 0.01). Also, contours of least significance follow great circles inclined relative to the ecliptic at the largest scales. The great circle for l=[2,3] passes over previously reported preferred axes and is insensitive to frequency, while the great circle for l=[6,7] is aligned with the ecliptic poles. We examine how changing map-making parameters affects asymmetry, and find that at large scales, it is rendered insignificant if the magnitude of the WMAP dipole vector is increased by approximately 1-3 sigma (or 2-6 km/s). While confirmation of this result would require data recalibration, such a systematic change would be consistent with observations of frequency-independent asymmetry. We conclude that the use of an incorrect dipole vector, in combination with a systematic or foreground process associated with the ecliptic, may help to explain the observed asymmetry.

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