275 research outputs found
Characterizing Galaxy Clusters with Gravitational Potential
We propose a simple estimator for the gravitational potential of cluster-size
halos using the temperature and density profiles of the intracluster gas based
on the assumptions of hydrostatic equilibrium and spherical symmetry. Using
high resolution cosmological simulations of galaxy clusters, we show that the
scaling relation between this estimator and the gravitational potential has a
small intrinsic scatter of ~8%-15%, and it is insensitive to baryon physics
outside the cluster core. The slope and the normalization of the scaling
relation vary weakly with redshift, and they are relatively independent of the
choice of radial range used and the dynamical states of the clusters. The
results presented here provide a possible way for using the cluster potential
function as an alternative to the cluster mass function in constraining
cosmology using galaxy clusters.Comment: 10 pages, 7 figures, 4 tables. Matching the version accepted for
publication in the Astrophysical Journa
Analytical model for non-thermal pressure in galaxy clusters - III. Removing the hydrostatic mass bias
Non-thermal pressure in galaxy clusters leads to underestimation of the mass
of galaxy clusters based on hydrostatic equilibrium with thermal gas pressure.
This occurs even for dynamically relaxed clusters that are used for calibrating
the mass-observable scaling relations. We show that the analytical model for
non-thermal pressure developed in Shi & Komatsu 2014 can correct for this
so-called 'hydrostatic mass bias', if most of the non-thermal pressure comes
from bulk and turbulent motions of gas in the intracluster medium. Our
correction works for the sample average irrespective of the mass estimation
method, or the dynamical state of the clusters. This makes it possible to
correct for the bias in the hydrostatic mass estimates from X-ray surface
brightness and the Sunyaev-Zel'dovich observations that will be available for
clusters in a wide range of redshifts and dynamical states.Comment: 9 pages, 8 figures, published in MNRA
Correlations between Triaxial Shapes and Formation History of Dark Matter Haloes
The shape of dark matter haloes plays a critical role in constraining
cosmology with upcoming large-scale structure surveys. In this paper, we study
the correlations between the triaxial shapes and formation histories in dark
matter haloes in the MultiDark Planck 2 N-body cosmological simulation. We find
that halo ellipticity is strongly correlated with halo properties that serve as
proxies of halo formation history, such as halo concentration and the
peak-centroid offset. In particular, the correlation between halo ellipticity
and halo concentration is nearly independent of the halo density peak height.
We present a simple model for the correlation between halo ellipticity and
concentration using conditional abundance matching, and provide fitting
formulae for the multi-dimensional distributions of triaxial halo shape as a
function of halo peak height. We apply our halo shape model to gauge the
effects of halo ellipticity and orientation bias on the excess surface mass
density profiles in cluster-size halos. Our model should be useful for
exploring the impact of triaxial halo shape on cosmological constraints in
upcoming weak lensing surveys of galaxy clusters.Comment: 8 pages, 5 figures, submitted to MNRA
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