150 research outputs found
The persistent cosmic web and its filamentary structure II: Illustrations
The recently introduced discrete persistent structure extractor (DisPerSE,
Soubie 2010, paper I) is implemented on realistic 3D cosmological simulations
and observed redshift catalogues (SDSS); it is found that DisPerSE traces
equally well the observed filaments, walls, and voids in both cases. In either
setting, filaments are shown to connect onto halos, outskirt walls, which
circumvent voids. Indeed this algorithm operates directly on the particles
without assuming anything about the distribution, and yields a natural
(topologically motivated) self-consistent criterion for selecting the
significance level of the identified structures. It is shown that this
extraction is possible even for very sparsely sampled point processes, as a
function of the persistence ratio. Hence astrophysicists should be in a
position to trace and measure precisely the filaments, walls and voids from
such samples and assess the confidence of the post-processed sets as a function
of this threshold, which can be expressed relative to the expected amplitude of
shot noise. In a cosmic framework, this criterion is comparable to friend of
friend for the identifications of peaks, while it also identifies the connected
filaments and walls, and quantitatively recovers the full set of topological
invariants (Betti numbers) {\sl directly from the particles} as a function of
the persistence threshold. This criterion is found to be sufficient even if one
particle out of two is noise, when the persistence ratio is set to 3-sigma or
more. The algorithm is also implemented on the SDSS catalogue and used to locat
interesting configurations of the filamentary structure. In this context we
carried the identification of an ``optically faint'' cluster at the
intersection of filaments through the recent observation of its X-ray
counterpart by SUZAKU. The corresponding filament catalogue will be made
available online.Comment: A higher resolution version is available at
http://www.iap.fr/users/sousbie together with complementary material (movie
and data). Submitted to MNRA
Systematic X-ray Analysis of Radio Relic Clusters with SUZAKU
We perform a systematic X-ray analysis of six giant radio relics in four
clusters of galaxies using the Suzaku satellite. The sample includes CIZA
2242.8-5301, Zwcl 2341.1-0000, the South-East part of Abell 3667 and previously
published results of the North-West part of Abell 3667 and Abell 3376.
Especially we first observed the narrow (50 kpc) relic of CIZA 2242.8-5301 by
Suzaku satellite, which enable us to reduce the projection effect. We report
X-ray detections of shocks at the position of the relics in CIZA2242.8-5301 and
Abell 3667 SE. At the position of the two relics in ZWCL2341.1-0000, we do not
detect shocks. From the spectroscopic temperature profiles across the relic, we
find that the temperature profiles exhibit significant jumps across the relics
for CIZA 2242.8-5301, Abell 3376, Abell 3667NW, and Abell 3667SE. We estimated
the Mach number from the X-ray temperature or pressure profile using the
Rankine-Hugoniot jump condition and compared it with the Mach number derived
from the radio spectral index. The resulting Mach numbers (M=1.5-3) are almost
consistent with each other, while the Mach number of CIZA2242 derived from the
X-ray data tends to be lower than that of the radio observation. These results
indicate that the giant radio relics in merging clusters are related to the
shock structure, as suggested by previous studies of individual clusters.Comment: Accepted for publication in PAS
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