511 research outputs found
A Small-Scale Modification to the Lensing Kernel
Calculations of the Cosmic Microwave Background lensing power implemented
into the standard cosmological codes such as CAMB and CLASS usually treat the
surface of last scatter as an infinitely thin screen. However, since the CMB
anisotropies are smoothed out on scales smaller than the diffusion length due
to the effect of Silk damping, the photons which carry information about the
small-scale density distribution come from slightly earlier times than the
standard recombination time. The dominant effect is the scale dependence of the
mean redshift associated with the fluctuations during recombination. We find
that fluctuations at come from a characteristic
redshift of , while fluctuations at
come from a characteristic redshift of . We then estimate the
corrections to the lensing kernel and the related power spectra due to this
effect. We conclude that neglecting it would result in a deviation from the
true value of the lensing kernel at the half percent level at small CMB scales.
For an all-sky, noise-free experiment, this corresponds to a
shift in the observed temperature power spectrum on small scales ().Comment: 5 pages, 5 figure
The Coyote Universe I: Precision Determination of the Nonlinear Matter Power Spectrum
Near-future cosmological observations targeted at investigations of dark
energy pose stringent requirements on the accuracy of theoretical predictions
for the clustering of matter. Currently, N-body simulations comprise the only
viable approach to this problem. In this paper we demonstrate that N-body
simulations can indeed be sufficiently controlled to fulfill these requirements
for the needs of ongoing and near-future weak lensing surveys. By performing a
large suite of cosmological simulation comparison and convergence tests we show
that results for the nonlinear matter power spectrum can be obtained at 1%
accuracy out to k~1 h/Mpc. The key components of these high accuracy
simulations are: precise initial conditions, very large simulation volumes,
sufficient mass resolution, and accurate time stepping. This paper is the first
in a series of three, with the final aim to provide a high-accuracy prediction
scheme for the nonlinear matter power spectrum.Comment: 18 pages, 22 figures, minor changes to address referee repor
Searching for hidden mirror symmetries in CMB fluctuations from WMAP 7 year maps
We search for hidden mirror symmetries at large angular scales in the WMAP 7
year Internal Linear Combination map of CMB temperature anisotropies using
global pixel based estimators introduced for this aim. Two different axes are
found for which the CMB intensity pattern is anomalously symmetric (or
anti-symmetric) under reflection with respect to orthogonal planes at the
99.84(99.96)% CL (confidence level), if compared to a result for an arbitrary
axis in simulations without the symmetry. We have verified that our results are
robust to the introduction of the galactic mask. The direction of such axes is
close to the CMB kinematic dipole and nearly orthogonal to the ecliptic plane,
respectively. If instead the real data are compared to those in simulations
taken with respect to planes for which the maximal mirror symmetry is generated
by chance, the confidence level decreases to 92.39 (76.65)%. But when the
effect in question translates into the anomalous alignment between normals to
planes of maximal mirror (anti)-symmetry and these natural axes mentioned. We
also introduce the representation of the above estimators in the harmonic
domain, confirming the results obtained in the pixel one. The symmetry anomaly
is shown to be almost entirely due to low multipoles, so it may have a
cosmological and even primordial origin. Contrary, the anti-symmetry one is
mainly due to intermediate multipoles that probably suggests its
non-fundamental nature. We have demonstrated that these anomalies are not
connected to the known issue of the low variance in WMAP observations and we
have checked that axially symmetric parts of these anomalies are small, so that
the axes are not the symmetry ones.Comment: 18 pages, 10 figures, 2 tables. Consideration and discussion
expanded, 5 figures and 1 table added, main conclusions unchange
The Lyman-alpha forest at redshifts 0.1 -- 1.6: good agreement between a large hydrodynamic simulation and HST spectra
We give a comprehensive statistical description of the Lyman-alpha absorption
from the intergalactic medium in a hydrodynamic simulation at redshifts
0.1-1.6, the range of redshifts covered by HST spectra of QSOs. We use the ENZO
code to make a 76 comoving Mpc cube simulation using 75 kpc cells, for a Hubble
constant of 71 km/s/Mpc. The best prior work, by \citet{dave99},used an SPH
simulation in a 15.6 Mpc box with an effective resolution of 245 kpc and
slightly different cosmological parameters. At redshifts z=2 this simulation is
different from data. \citet{tytler07b} found that the simulated spectra at z=2
have too little power on large scales, Lyman-alpha lines are too wide, there is
a lack high column density lines, and there is a lack of pixels with low flux.
Here we present statistics at z<1.6, including the flux distribution, the mean
flux, the effective opacity, and the power and correlation of the flux. We also
give statistics of the lyman alpha lines including the line width distribution,
the column density distribution, the number of lines per unit equivalent width
and redshift, and the correlation between the line width and column density. We
find that the mean amount of absorption in the simulated spectra changes
smoothly with redshift with DA(z)=0.01(1+z)^{2.25}. Both the trend and absolute
values are close to measurements of HST spectra by \citet{kirkman07a}. The
column density and line width distributions are also close to those measured
from HST spectra by \citet{janknecht06a}, except for the mode of the line width
distribution which is smaller in the HST spectra. Although some differences
that we saw at z=2 are too subtle to be seen in existing HST spectra, overall,
the simulation gives an good description of HST spectra at 0.1<z<1.6
Sunyaev Zel'dovich Effect Observations of Strong Lensing Galaxy Clusters: Probing the Over-Concentration Problem
We have measured the Sunyaev Zel'dovich (SZ) effect for a sample of ten
strong lensing selected galaxy clusters using the Sunyaev Zel'dovich Array
(SZA). The SZA is sensitive to structures on spatial scales of a few
arcminutes, while the strong lensing mass modeling constrains the mass at small
scales (typically < 30"). Combining the two provides information about the
projected concentrations of the strong lensing clusters. The Einstein radii we
measure are twice as large as expected given the masses inferred from SZ
scaling relations. A Monte Carlo simulation indicates that a sample randomly
drawn from the expected distribution would have a larger median Einstein radius
than the observed clusters about 3% of the time. The implied overconcentration
has been noted in previous studies with smaller samples of lensing clusters. It
persists for this sample, with the caveat that this could result from a
systematic effect such as if the gas fractions of the strong lensing clusters
are substantially below what is expected.Comment: submitte
On the Baryon Fractions in Clusters and Groups of Galaxies
We present the baryon fractions of 2MASS groups and clusters as a function of
cluster richness using total and gas masses measured from stacked ROSAT X-ray
data and stellar masses estimated from the infrared galaxy catalogs. We detect
X-ray emission even in the outskirts of clusters, beyond r_200 for richness
classes with X-ray temperatures above 1 keV. This enables us to more accurately
determine the total gas mass in these groups and clusters. We find that the
optically selected groups and clusters have flatter temperature profiles and
higher stellar-to-gas mass ratios than the individually studied, X-ray bright
clusters. We also find that the stellar mass in poor groups with temperatures
below 1 keV is comparable to the gas mass in these systems. Combining these
results with individual measurements for clusters, groups, and galaxies from
the literature, we find a break in the baryon fraction at ~1 keV. Above this
temperature, the baryon fraction scales with temperature as f_b \propto
T^0.20\pm0.03. We see significantly smaller baryon fractions below this
temperature, and the baryon fraction of poor groups joins smoothly onto that of
systems with still shallower potential wells such as normal and dwarf galaxies
where the baryon fraction scales with the inferred velocity dispersion as f_b
\propto \sigma^1.6. The small scatter in the baryon fraction at any given
potential well depth favors a universal baryon loss mechanism and a preheating
model for the baryon loss. The scatter is, however, larger for less massive
systems. Finally, we note that although the broken power-law relation can be
inferred from data points in the literature alone, the consistency between the
baryon fractions for poor groups and massive galaxies inspires us to fit the
two categories of objects (galaxies and clusters) with one relation.Comment: 21 pages, 5 figures, ApJ in pres
Cosmological Constraints from the SDSS maxBCG Cluster Catalog
We use the abundance and weak lensing mass measurements of the SDSS maxBCG
cluster catalog to simultaneously constrain cosmology and the richness--mass
relation of the clusters. Assuming a flat \LambdaCDM cosmology, we find
\sigma_8(\Omega_m/0.25)^{0.41} = 0.832\pm 0.033 after marginalization over all
systematics. In common with previous studies, our error budget is dominated by
systematic uncertainties, the primary two being the absolute mass scale of the
weak lensing masses of the maxBCG clusters, and uncertainty in the scatter of
the richness--mass relation. Our constraints are fully consistent with the WMAP
five-year data, and in a joint analysis we find \sigma_8=0.807\pm 0.020 and
\Omega_m=0.265\pm 0.016, an improvement of nearly a factor of two relative to
WMAP5 alone. Our results are also in excellent agreement with and comparable in
precision to the latest cosmological constraints from X-ray cluster abundances.
The remarkable consistency among these results demonstrates that cluster
abundance constraints are not only tight but also robust, and highlight the
power of optically-selected cluster samples to produce precision constraints on
cosmological parameters.Comment: comments welcom
Constraining the Scatter in the Mass-Richness Relation of maxBCG Clusters With Weak Lensing and X-ray Data
We measure the logarithmic scatter in mass at fixed richness for clusters in
the maxBCG cluster catalog, an optically selected cluster sample drawn from
SDSS imaging data. Our measurement is achieved by demanding consistency between
available weak lensing and X-ray measurements of the maxBCG clusters, and the
X-ray luminosity--mass relation inferred from the 400d X-ray cluster survey, a
flux limited X-ray cluster survey. We find \sigma_{\ln
M|N_{200}}=0.45^{+0.20}_{-0.18} (95% CL) at N_{200} ~ 40, where N_{200} is the
number of red sequence galaxies in a cluster. As a byproduct of our analysis,
we also obtain a constraint on the correlation coefficient between \ln Lx and
\ln M at fixed richness, which is best expressed as a lower limit, r_{L,M|N} >=
0.85 (95% CL). This is the first observational constraint placed on a
correlation coefficient involving two different cluster mass tracers. We use
our results to produce a state of the art estimate of the halo mass function at
z=0.23 -- the median redshift of the maxBCG cluster sample -- and find that it
is consistent with the WMAP5 cosmology. Both the mass function data and its
covariance matrix are presented.Comment: 14 pages, 6 figures, submitted to Ap
A quantitative explanation of the observed population of Milky Way satellite galaxies
We revisit the well known discrepancy between the observed number of Milky
Way (MW) dwarf satellite companions and the predicted population of cold dark
matter (CDM) sub-halos, in light of the dozen new low luminosity satellites
found in SDSS imaging data and our recent calibration of the SDSS satellite
detection efficiency, which implies a total population far larger than these
dozen discoveries. We combine a dynamical model for the CDM sub-halo population
with simple, physically motivated prescriptions for assigning stellar content
to each sub-halo, then apply observational selection effects and compare to the
current observational census. As expected, models in which the stellar mass is
a constant fraction F(Omega_b/Omega_m) of the sub-halo mass M_sat at the time
it becomes a satellite fail for any choice of F. However, previously advocated
models that invoke suppression of gas accretion after reionization in halos
with circular velocity v_c <~ 35 km/s can reproduce the observed satellite
counts for -15 < M_V < 0, with F ~ 10^{-3}. Successful models also require
strong suppression of star formation BEFORE reionization in halos with v_c <~
10 km/s; models without pre-reionization suppression predict far too many
satellites with -5 < M_V < 0. Our models also reproduce the observed stellar
velocity dispersions ~ 5-10 km/s of the SDSS dwarfs given the observed sizes of
their stellar distributions, and model satellites have M(<300 pc) ~ 10^7 M_sun
as observed even though their present day total halo masses span more than two
orders of magnitude. Our modeling shows that natural physical mechanisms acting
within the CDM framework can quantitatively explain the properties of the MW
satellite population as it is presently known, thus providing a convincing
solution to the `missing satellite' problem.Comment: 18 pages, 14 figures, accepted to ApJ. Minor changes following
referees repor
A Census of Baryons and Dark Matter in an Isolated, Milky Way-sized Elliptical Galaxy
We present a study of the dark and luminous matter in the isolated elliptical
galaxy NGC720, based on deep X-ray observations made with Chandra and Suzaku.
The gas is reliably measured to ~R2500, allowing us to place good constraints
on the enclosed mass and baryon fraction (fb) within this radius
(M2500=1.6e12+/-0.2e12 Msun, fb(2500)=0.10+/-0.01; systematic errors are
<~20%). The data indicate that the hot gas is close to hydrostatic, which is
supported by good agreement with a kinematical analysis of the dwarf satellite
galaxies. We confirm a dark matter (DM) halo at ~20-sigma. Assuming an NFW DM
profile, our physical model for the gas distribution enables us to obtain
meaningful constraints at scales larger than R2500, revealing that most of the
baryons are in the hot gas. We find that fb within Rvir is consistent with the
Cosmological value, confirming theoretical predictions that a ~Milky Way-mass
(Mvir=3.1e12+/-0.4e12 Msun) galaxy can sustain a massive, quasi-hydrostatic gas
halo. While fb is higher than the cold baryon fraction typically measured in
similar-mass spiral galaxies, both the gas fraction (fg) and fb in NGC720 are
consistent with an extrapolation of the trends with mass seen in massive galaxy
groups and clusters. After correcting for fg, the entropy profile is close to
the self-similar prediction of gravitational structure formation simulations,
as observed in galaxy clusters. Finally, we find a strong heavy metal abundance
gradient in the ISM similar to those observed in massive galaxy groups.Comment: 23 pages, 13 figures, 4 tables. Accepted for publication in the
Astrophysical Journal. Minor modifications to match accepted version.
Conclusions unchange
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