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AY202a Galaxies & Dynamics Lecture 18: Galaxy Clusters & Cosmology
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X-ray Scaling Laws Temperature versus X-ray Luminosity
Note small range in T! Temperature versus X-ray Luminosity Mushotzky & Scharf ‘97
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Compilation of Diego & Partridge ‘09
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Strong correlation between x-ray gas temperature and galaxy velocity dispersion
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p = rvirial/rcore X-ray Luminosity vs Size Diego & Partridge ‘09
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Chemistry Cluster gas element abundances from x-ray spectra
(Mushotzky)
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Evolution, or lack thereof,
of [Fe/H]
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Cooling Flows Long except at cluster centers Gas cooling time
tcool = u/εff 8.5x1010 yr x ( )-1 ( ) ½ Long except at cluster centers where densities are high ne T 10-3cm K Fabian Perseus red= kev green = 1-2 kev blue = 2-7 kev
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Typical cooling timescale for cluster centers < 109 yr
where does the material go? Mass deposition rate calculated as dM/dt = where L is bolometric L Problem is that there is little evidence except in a very few cases (e.g. Perseus) for recent star formation. Solutions? AGN Heating? Thermal Conduction? Thermal Mixing? Cosmic ray heating? Absorption? 2 L μm 5 k T
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Clusters & Cosmology Ωmatter (Zwicky ) from <M/L> and total luminosity density. Hubble Constant from Sunyaev-Zeldovich effect (more on that later) The Baryon Problem Tracing Dark Matter Cluster Abundances vs Redshift & Cosmological Parameters
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2MASS Galaxy Groups δρ/ρ = 12 δρ/ρ = 80
δρ/ρ = δρ/ρ = 80 σP (km/s) RPV (Mpc) log MV/LK Log MP/LK ΩM,V / /-0.02 ΩM,P / /-0.02 V=Virial Estimator P = Projected Mass
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Gravitational Lensing
Mass reconstruction Distance Measurement Einstein radius θE = 28.8” ( )2 ( ) O L S v Dds 1000 km/s Ds Dds Ds
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Lensing Mass Profile for A2218
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Sunyaev-Zeldovich Effect
In 1970 Sunyaev & Zeldovich realized that the CMB spectrum would be affected by passage through a hot gas via Inverse Compton scattering.
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Scattered through an atmosphere with Compton parameter
Exaggerated spectral distortion due to the SZ effect. Scattered through an atmosphere with Compton parameter y = 0.1 and τβ = 0.05 (Birkinshaw) CMB Distorted CMB
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Narrower frequency range from Carlstrom (2002)
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Scattering optical depth τe = ne(r) T dl (dl along l.o.s.)
We calculate the Thermal SZ effect (SZ from thermalized electron distribution) from an electron gas with density distribution ne(r): Scattering optical depth τe = ne(r) T dl (dl along l.o.s.) Comptonization parameter y = ne(r) T dl X-ray spectral surface brightness along l.o.s. BX(E) = (ne(r))2 Λ(E,Te) dl k Te(r) me c 2 1 4 (1+z)3 Where Λ is the spectral emissivity of the gas at energy E
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and the x-ray angular diameter θ = L/dA
and again the Thomson cross-section is T = ( )2 In the Rayleigh-Jeans region, we generally have for the change in brightness = -2y For distance determinations, assume a round cluster with effective diameter L then ne L T and the x-ray intensity IX L ne2 and the x-ray angular diameter θ = L/dA 8 e2 me c2 Δ Iυ Iυ Δ Iυ Iυ
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Which gives dA = ~ ( )2 where χ is the comoving distance and k is the curvature density 1 - Total R L ΔIυ θ θ Iυ IX
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Kinematic SZ Effect Cluster motions also can affect the CMB viewed
through them. The size of the effect depends on the peculiar velocity of the cluster w.r.t. the expansion
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SZ measurements of A2163 from Holzapfel (1997) with SuZie (SZ Infrared experiment on Mauna Kea)
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SZ Maps from J. Carlstrom’s group
A2163 again SZ Maps from J. Carlstrom’s group (BIMA/OVRO; Carlstrom, Holder & Reese 2002)
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SZ in WMAP data (stacked clusters)
W band V band Q band (90 GHz) (60 GHz) (40 GHz) Diego & Partridge (2009)
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Planck (launched May 14, 2009) will do an all-sky SZ survey for galaxy clusters. Two instruments (LFI and HFI) will survey in nine frequency bands between 30 and 857 GHz
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Cluster Baryon “Problem”
Lets compare the Baryonic cluster mass = Gas Mass + Galaxy Mass to the Dynamical Total Mass of the cluster. Mgas (<R) = 4 πo ro3 x2 (1+x2)-3/2 dx where X = R/ro, and MTot (<R) = ( ) where both are derived from x-ray data. c.f. White & Frenk 1991, White et al. 1993 X -kTR R d R dT Gmp dr T dr
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by some simple trick substitutions, and remembering the Beta model:
z = x2/(1 + x2) T(r) = To (r/ro)- R/ d/dr = -3Zβ And MTot (<R) = (3Zβ + ) with 0 β 1 k T R G mp
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MGal,baryonic < Mgas or even << MGas
we also find that for the typical cluster MGal,baryonic < Mgas or even << MGas In the average cluster MGas ~ 0.1 h-1.5 MTotal Simulations (White & Frenk, etc.) suggest that at least on 1 Mpc scales, Gas = CDM distributions But we also have baryon (nucleosynthesis) ~ 0.02 h-2 ~ for h = 0.7 Total ~ 1 (!) (in 1993 this was big, bad news for SCDM, but do go a long way towards solving the baryon problem)
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The Bullet Cluster
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Cosmological Parameters from Cluster Mass Functions
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Constraints from the evolution of the mass function.
Vikhlinin et al 2009
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Combined constraints from clusters plus BAO, CMB & SN Ia
Chandra Cluster Cosmology project Vikhlinin et al. 2009
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