35 research outputs found
Magnetic fields and Sunyaev-Zel'dovich effect in galaxy clusters
In this work we study the contribution of magnetic fields to the Sunyaev
Zeldovich (SZ) effect in the intracluster medium. In particular we calculate
the SZ angular power spectrum and the central temperature decrement. The effect
of magnetic fields is included in the hydrostatic equilibrium equation by
splitting the Lorentz force into two terms one being the force due to magnetic
pressure which acts outwards and the other being magnetic tension which acts
inwards. A perturbative approach is adopted to solve for the gas density
profile for weak magnetic fields (< 4 micro G}). This leads to an enhancement
of the gas density in the central regions for nearly radial magnetic field
configurations. Previous works had considered the force due to magnetic
pressure alone which is the case only for a special set of field
configurations. However, we see that there exists possible sets of
configurations of ICM magnetic fields where the force due to magnetic tension
will dominate. Subsequently, this effect is extrapolated for typical field
strengths (~ 10 micro G) and scaling arguments are used to estimate the angular
power due to secondary anisotropies at cluster scales. In particular we find
that it is possible to explain the excess power reported by CMB experiments
like CBI, BIMA, ACBAR at l > 2000 with sigma_8 ~ 0.8 (WMAP 5 year data) for
typical cluster magnetic fields. In addition we also see that the magnetic
field effect on the SZ temperature decrement is more pronounced for low mass
clusters ( ~ 2 keV). Future SZ detections of low mass clusters at few arc
second resolution will be able to probe this effect more precisely. Thus, it
will be instructive to explore the implications of this model in greater detail
in future works.Comment: 20 pages, 8 figure
Is cosmology consistent?
We perform a detailed analysis of the latest CMB measurements (including
BOOMERaNG, DASI, Maxima and CBI), both alone and jointly with other
cosmological data sets involving, e.g., galaxy clustering and the Lyman Alpha
Forest. We first address the question of whether the CMB data are internally
consistent once calibration and beam uncertainties are taken into account,
performing a series of statistical tests. With a few minor caveats, our answer
is yes, and we compress all data into a single set of 24 bandpowers with
associated covariance matrix and window functions. We then compute joint
constraints on the 11 parameters of the ``standard'' adiabatic inflationary
cosmological model. Out best fit model passes a series of physical consistency
checks and agrees with essentially all currently available cosmological data.
In addition to sharp constraints on the cosmic matter budget in good agreement
with those of the BOOMERaNG, DASI and Maxima teams, we obtain a heaviest
neutrino mass range 0.04-4.2 eV and the sharpest constraints to date on gravity
waves which (together with preference for a slight red-tilt) favors
``small-field'' inflation models.Comment: Replaced to match accepted PRD version. 14 pages, 12 figs. Tiny
changes due to smaller DASI & Maxima calibration errors. Expanded neutrino
and tensor discussion, added refs, typos fixed. Combined CMB data, window and
covariance matrix at http://www.hep.upenn.edu/~max/consistent.html or from
[email protected]
Growth Rate of Large Scale Structure as a Powerful Probe of Dark Energy
The redshift evolution of the growth rate of the gravitational potential,
d(D/a)/dz, is an excellent discriminator of dark energy parameters and, in
principle, more powerful than standard classical tests of cosmology. This
evolution is directly observable through the integrated Sachs-Wolfe effect in
cosmic microwave background (CMB) anisotropies. We consider the prospects of
measuring the growth rate via a novel method employed through measurements of
CMB polarization towards galaxy clusters. The potentially achievable errors on
dark energy parameters are comparable and fully complementary to those expected
from other upcoming tests of dark energy, making this test a highly promising
tool of precision cosmology.Comment: 4 pages, 2 figures, submitted to Phys. Rev. Let
Reionization by active sources and its effects on the cosmic microwave background
We investigate the possible effects of reionization by active sources on the
cosmic microwave background. We concentrate on the sources themselves as the
origin of reionization, rather than early object formation, introducing an
extra period of heating motivated by the active character of the perturbations.
Using reasonable parameters, this leads to four possibilities depending on the
time and duration of the energy input: delayed last scattering, double last
scattering, shifted last scattering and total reionization. We show that these
possibilities are only very weakly constrained by the limits on spectral
distortions from the COBE FIRAS measurements. We illustrate the effects of
these reionization possibilities on the angular power spectrum of temperature
anisotropies and polarization for simple passive isocurvature models and simple
coherent sources, observing the difference between passive and active models.
Finally, we comment on the implications of this work for more realistic active
sources, such as causal white noise and topological defect models. We show for
these models that non-standard ionization histories can shift the peak in the
CMB power to larger angular scales.Comment: 21 pages LaTeX with 11 eps figures; replaced with final version
accepted for publication in Phys. Rev.
Some remarks on the angular momenta of galaxies, their clusters and superclusters
We discuss the relation between angular momenta and masses of galaxy
structures base on the Li model of the universe with global rotation. In our
previous paper (God{\l}owski et al 2002) it was shown that the model predicts
the presence of a minimum in this relation. In the present paper we discuss
observational evidence allowing us to verify this relation. We find null
angular momentum J=0 for the masses corresponding to mass of galaxy grups and
non-vanishing angular momenta for other galactic structures. We check these
theoretical predictions analysing Tully's galaxy grups. The existing data
comparing alignment in different galactic structure are consistent with
obtained theoretical relation if we interpret the groving alignment as
the galactic increasing angular momenta in the galactic structure.Comment: 20 pages 1 figure. GRG accepte
Particle acceleration mechanisms
We review the possible mechanisms for production of non-thermal electrons
which are responsible for non-thermal radiation in clusters of galaxies. Our
primary focus is on non-thermal Bremsstrahlung and inverse Compton scattering,
that produce hard X-ray emission. We briefly review acceleration mechanisms and
point out that in most astrophysical situations, and in particular for the
intracluster medium, shocks, turbulence and plasma waves play a crucial role.
We consider two scenarios for production of non-thermal radiation. The first is
hard X-ray emission due to non-thermal Bremsstrahlung by nonrelativistic
particles. Non-thermal tails are produced by accelerating electrons from the
background plasma with an initial Maxwellian distribution. However, these tails
are accompanied by significant heating and they are present for a short time of
<10^6 yr, which is also the time that the tail will be thermalised. Such
non-thermal tails, even if possible, can only explain the hard X-ray but not
the radio emission which needs GeV or higher energy electrons. For these and
for production of hard X-rays by the inverse Compton model, we need the second
scenario where there is injection and subsequent acceleration of relativistic
electrons. It is shown that a steady state situation, for example arising from
secondary electrons produced from cosmic ray proton scattering by background
protons, will most likely lead to flatter than required electron spectra or it
requires a short escape time of the electrons from the cluster. An episodic
injection of relativistic electrons, presumably from galaxies or AGN, and/or
episodic generation of turbulence and shocks by mergers can result in an
electron spectrum consistent with observations but for only a short period of
less than one billion years.Comment: 22 pages, 5 figures, accepted for publication in Space Science
Reviews, special issue "Clusters of galaxies: beyond the thermal view",
Editor J.S. Kaastra, Chapter 11; work done by an international team at the
International Space Science Institute (ISSI), Bern, organised by J.S.
Kaastra, A.M. Bykov, S. Schindler & J.A.M. Bleeke
Multiethnic Meta-Analysis Identifies RAI1 as a Possible Obstructive Sleep Apnea-related Quantitative Trait Locus in Men.
Obstructive sleep apnea (OSA) is a common heritable disorder displaying marked sexual dimorphism in disease prevalence and progression. Previous genetic association studies have identified a few genetic loci associated with OSA and related quantitative traits, but they have only focused on single ethnic groups, and a large proportion of the heritability remains unexplained. The apnea-hypopnea index (AHI) is a commonly used quantitative measure characterizing OSA severity. Because OSA differs by sex, and the pathophysiology of obstructive events differ in rapid eye movement (REM) and non-REM (NREM) sleep, we hypothesized that additional genetic association signals would be identified by analyzing the NREM/REM-specific AHI and by conducting sex-specific analyses in multiethnic samples. We performed genome-wide association tests for up to 19,733 participants of African, Asian, European, and Hispanic/Latino American ancestry in 7 studies. We identified rs12936587 on chromosome 17 as a possible quantitative trait locus for NREM AHI in men (N = 6,737; P = 1.7 × 10 <sup>-8</sup> ) but not in women (P = 0.77). The association with NREM AHI was replicated in a physiological research study (N = 67; P = 0.047). This locus overlapping the RAI1 gene and encompassing genes PEMT1, SREBF1, and RASD1 was previously reported to be associated with coronary artery disease, lipid metabolism, and implicated in Potocki-Lupski syndrome and Smith-Magenis syndrome, which are characterized by abnormal sleep phenotypes. We also identified gene-by-sex interactions in suggestive association regions, suggesting that genetic variants for AHI appear to vary by sex, consistent with the clinical observations of strong sexual dimorphism
The First Distant X-ray Quasars (z ~ 4) among the Sources Discovered by the eROSITA Telescope of the SRG Orbital Observatory during a Deep Lockman Hole Survey
© 2020, Pleiades Publishing, Inc. Abstract: During a deep extragalactic Lockman Hole sky survey with an area of 18.5 sq. deg, which was conducted when the SRG observatory was flying to the Lagrange point L2, the eROSITA telescope detected ~7000 X-ray sources. These objects were then provisionally identified and classified using the publicly accessible data of optical and infrared sky surveys by the SRGz machine learning system developed for this purpose at the Space Research Institute of the Russian Academy of Sciences. As a result, a number of new candidates for distant quasars (z ~ 4) have been selected. The spectroscopic observations of the first two candidates from this list carried out with the 1.6-m AZT-33IK telescope of the Sayan Solar Observatory have confirmed that these objects are actually distant quasars at redshifts 3.878 and 4.116 and are characterized by a high X-ray luminosity ~1045 erg s-1 (2–10 keV). The results obtained allow one to count on the detection of a large number of distant quasars during a four-year all-sky survey of the SRG observatory begun in December 2019
Spectroscopic Redshift Measurements for Galaxy Clusters Detected in the Planck All-Sky Survey
© 2020, Pleiades Publishing, Ltd. Abstract: We present the results of spectroscopic redshift measurements for galaxy clusters from the catalogue compiled previously from Planck all-sky survey data in combination with Sloan Digital Sky Survey (SDSS) and WISE data in the optical and infrared ranges. Most of these clusters are massive objects that will also be detected in future all-sky surveys, such as the eROSITA all-sky X-ray survey onboard the Spectrum–Roentgen–Gamma (SRG) space observatory. The spectroscopic observations of these galaxy clusters have been carried out with the 1.5-m Russian–Turkish telescope (RTT150), the 1.6-m Sayan Observatory AZT-33IK telescope, and the 6-m SAO RAS telescope (Bolshoi Teleskop Azimutalnyi, BTA). The spectroscopic redshift measurements have been obtained for 67 galaxy clusters, including 12 galaxy clusters from the second Planck catalogue of Sunyaev–Zeldovich sources
Axis inhibition protein 2 (AXIN2) polymorphisms and tooth agenesis
Tooth agenesis is a common congenital disorder that affects almost 20% of the world's population. A number of different genes have been shown to be associated with cases of tooth agenesis including AXIN2, IRF6, FGFR1, MSX1, PAX9, and TGFA. Of particular interest is AXIN2, which was linked to two families segregating oligodontia and colorectal cancer. We studied two collections of families affected with tooth agenesis and tested them for association with AXIN2. Significant association between tooth agenesis and AXIN2 was found (p = 0.02) in cases with at least one missing incisor. Our work further supports a role of AXIN2 in human tooth agenesis and for the first time suggests AXIN2 is involved in sporadic forms of common incisor agenesis. Future studies should identify which specific tooth agenesis sub-phenotypes are consequence of AXIN2 genetic variations. A sub-set of these cases could have an increased susceptibility for colon cancer or other types of tumours and this knowledge would have significant clinical implications. © 2008 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved