336 research outputs found
A new method for calculating the primordial bispectrum in the squeezed limit
In 2004, Creminelli and Zaldarriaga proposed a consistency relation for the
primordial curvature perturbation of all single-field inflation models; it
related the bispectrum in the squeezed limit to the spectral tilt. We have
developed a technique, based in part on the Creminelli and Zaldarriaga
argument, that can greatly simplify the calculation of the squeezed-limit
bispectrum using the in-in formalism; we were able to arrive at a generic
formula that does not rely on a slow-roll approximation. Using our formula, we
explicitly tested the consistency relation for power-law inflation and for an
exactly scale-invariant model by Starobinsky; for the latter model, Creminelli
and Zaldarriaga's argument predicts a vanishing bispectrum whereas our quantum
calculation shows a non-zero bispectrum that approaches zero in the
long-wavelength limit and for inflation with a large number of e-folds.Comment: 24 pages, 0 figures; v3: added a section calculating the squeezed
limit bispectrum of a model by Starobinsky, accepted by JCAP; v2: refocused
paper on main result, improved proof of consistency relation, added some
reference
The Sunyaev-Zel'dovich angular power spectrum as a probe of cosmological parameters
The angular power spectrum of the SZ effect, C_l, is a powerful probe of
cosmology. It is easier to detect than individual clusters in the field, is
insensitive to observational selection effects and does not require a
calibration between cluster mass and flux, reducing the systematic errors which
dominate the cluster-counting constraints. It receives a dominant contribution
from cluster region between 20-40% of the virial radius and is thus insensitive
to the poorly known gas physics in the cluster centre, such as cooling or
(pre)heating. In this paper we derive a refined analytic prediction for C_l
using the universal gas-density and temperature profile and the dark-matter
halo mass function. The predicted C_l has no free parameters and fits all of
the published hydrodynamic simulation results to better than a factor of two
around l=3000. We find that C_l scales as (sigma_8)^7 times (Omega_b h)^2 and
is almost independent of all of the other cosmological parameters. This differs
from the local cluster abundance studies, which give a relation between sigma_8
and Omega_m. We also compute the covariance matrix of C_l using the halo model
and find a good agreement relative to the simulations. We estimate how well we
can determine sigma_8 with sampling-variance-limited observations and find that
for a several-square-degree survey with 1-2 arcminute resolution one should be
able to determine sigma_8 to within a few percent, with the remaining
uncertainty dominated by theoretical modelling. If the recent excess of the CMB
power on small scales reported by the CBI experiment is due to the SZ effect,
then we find sigma_8(Omega_b h/0.029)^0.3 = 1.04 +- 0.12 at the 95% confidence
level (statistical) and with a residual 10% systematic (theoretical)
uncertainty.Comment: 17 pages, 14 figures, 1 table, sigma8 constraint including CBI and
BIMA, matches the accepted version in MNRA
Constraints on the annihilation cross section of dark matter particles from anisotropies in the diffuse gamma-ray background measured with Fermi-LAT
Annihilation of dark matter particles in cosmological halos (including a halo
of the Milky Way) contributes to the diffuse gamma-ray background (DGRB). As
this contribution will appear anisotropic in the sky, one can use the angular
power spectrum of anisotropies in DGRB to constrain properties of dark matter
particles. By comparing the updated analytic model of the angular power
spectrum of DGRB from dark matter annihilation with the power spectrum recently
measured from the 22-month data of Fermi Large Area Telescope (LAT), we place
upper limits on the annihilation cross section of dark matter particles as a
function of dark matter masses. We find that the current data exclude <\sigma
v> >~ 10^{-25} cm^3 s^{-1} for annihilation into b\bar{b} at the dark matter
mass of 10 GeV, which is a factor of three times larger than the canonical
cross section. The limits are weaker for larger dark matter masses. The limits
can be improved further with more Fermi-LAT data as well as by using the power
spectrum at lower multipoles (l <~ 150), which are currently not used due to a
potential Galactic foreground contamination.Comment: 13 pages, 18 figures, comments welcom
Bullet Cluster: A Challenge to LCDM Cosmology
To quantify how rare the bullet-cluster-like high-velocity merging systems
are in the standard LCDM cosmology, we use a large-volume 27 (Gpc/h)^3 MICE
simulation to calculate the distribution of infall velocities of subclusters
around massive main clusters. The infall-velocity distribution is given at
(1-3)R_{200} of the main cluster (where R_{200} is similar to the virial
radius), and thus it gives the distribution of realistic initial velocities of
subclusters just before collision. These velocities can be compared with the
initial velocities used by the non-cosmological hydrodynamical simulations of
1E0657-56 in the literature. The latest parameter search carried out recently
by Mastropietro and Burkert showed that the initial velocity of 3000 km/s at
about 2R_{200} is required to explain the observed shock velocity, X-ray
brightness ratio of the main and subcluster, and displacement of the X-ray
peaks from the mass peaks. We show that such a high infall velocity at 2R_{200}
is incompatible with the prediction of a LCDM model: the probability of finding
3000 km/s in (2-3)R_{200} is between 3.3X10^{-11} and 3.6X10^{-9}. It is
concluded that the existence of 1E0657-56 is incompatible with the prediction
of a LCDM model, unless a lower infall velocity solution for 1E0657-56 with <
1800 km/s at 2R_{200} is found.Comment: accepted for publication in ApJ, light-cone effect discussed, minor
typos corrected, 22 pages, 6 figures, 3 table
Bayesian evidence of non-standard inflation: isocurvature perturbations and running spectral index
Bayesian model comparison penalizes models with more free parameters that are
allowed to vary over a wide range, and thus offers the most robust method to
decide whether some given data require new parameters. In this paper, we ask a
simple question: do current cosmological data require extensions of the
simplest single-field inflation models? Specifically, we calculate the Bayesian
evidence of a totally anti-correlated isocurvature perturbation and a running
spectral index of the scalar curvature perturbation. These parameters are
motivated by recent claims that the observed temperature anisotropy of the
cosmic microwave background on large angular scales is too low to be compatible
with the simplest inflation models. Both a subdominant, anti-correlated cold
dark matter isocurvature component and a negative running index succeed in
lowering the large-scale temperature power spectrum. We show that the
introduction of isocurvature perturbations is disfavored, whereas that of the
running spectral index is only moderately favored, even when the BICEP2 data
are included in the analysis without any foreground subtraction.Comment: 5 pages, 2 figures. Minor modifications, to match version published
in January 201
AKARI near-infrared background fluctuations arise from normal galaxy populations
We show that measurements of the fluctuations in the near-infrared background
(NIRB) from the AKARI satellite can be explained by faint galaxy populations at
low redshifts. We demonstrate this using reconstructed images from deep galaxy
catalogs (HUGS/S-CANDELS) and two independent galaxy population models. In all
cases, we find that the NIRB fluctuations measured by AKARI are consistent with
faint galaxies and there is no need for a contribution from unknown
populations. We find no evidence for a steep Rayleigh-Jeans spectrum for the
underlying sources as previously reported. The apparent Rayleigh-Jeans spectrum
at large angular scales is likely a consequence of galaxies being removed
systematically to deeper levels in the longer wavelength channels.Comment: Submitted to MNRAS Letter
Analytical model for non-thermal pressure in galaxy clusters
Non-thermal pressure in the intracluster gas has been found ubiquitously in
numerical simulations, and observed indirectly. In this paper we develop an
analytical model for intracluster non-thermal pressure in the virial region of
relaxed clusters. We write down and solve a first-order differential equation
describing the evolution of non-thermal velocity dispersion. This equation is
based on insights gained from observations, numerical simulations, and theory
of turbulence. The non-thermal energy is sourced, in a self-similar fashion, by
the mass growth of clusters via mergers and accretion, and dissipates with a
time-scale determined by the turnover time of the largest turbulence eddies.
Our model predicts a radial profile of non-thermal pressure for relaxed
clusters. The non-thermal fraction increases with radius, redshift, and cluster
mass, in agreement with numerical simulations. The radial dependence is due to
a rapid increase of the dissipation time-scale with radii, and the mass and
redshift dependence comes from the mass growth history. Combing our model for
the non-thermal fraction with the Komatsu-Seljak model for the total pressure,
we obtain thermal pressure profiles, and compute the hydrostatic mass bias. We
find typically 10% bias for the hydrostatic mass enclosed within .Comment: 12 pages, 9 figures, published in MNRAS. Discussions and references
added. A factor of 2 corrected in t_dyn (Fig. 2), definition of t_d (Eq. 3)
changed accordingl
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