42 research outputs found

    The Impact of baryonic physics on the kinetic Sunyaev-Zel'dovich Effect

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    Poorly understood "baryonic physics" impacts our ability to predict the power spectrum of the kinetic Sunyaev-Zel'dovich (kSZ) effect. We study this in one sample high resolution simulation of galaxy formation and feedback, Illustris. The high resolution of Illustris allows us to probe the kSZ power spectrum on multipoles =1033×104\ell =10^3-3\times 10^4. Strong AGN feedback in Illustris nearly wipes out gas fluctuations at k1 h Mpc1k\gtrsim1~h~\rm{Mpc}^{-1} and at late times, likely somewhat under predicting the kSZ power generated at z1z\lesssim 1. The post-reionization kSZ power spectrum for Illustris is well-fit by Dz<6=1.38[/3000]0.21 μK2\mathcal{D}^{z<6}_{\ell} = 1.38[\ell/3000]^{0.21}~\mu K^2 over 3000100003000\lesssim\ell\lesssim10000, somewhat lower than most other reported values but consistent with the analysis of Shaw et al. Our analysis of the bias of free electrons reveals subtle effects associated with the multi-phase gas physics and stellar fractions that affect even linear scales. In particular there are fewer electrons in biased galaxies, due to gas cooling and star formation, and this leads to an electron bias less than one even at low wavenumbers. The combination of bias and electron fraction that determines the overall suppression is relatively constant, fe2be020.7f_e^2b^2_{e0} \sim 0.7, but more simulations are needed to see if this is Illustris-specific. By separating the kSZ power into different terms, we find at least 6(10)%6\, (10)\% of the signal at =3000(10000)\ell=3000\, (10000) comes from non-Gaussian connected four-point density and velocity correlations, \left_{c}, even without correcting for the Illustris simulation box size. A challenge going forward will be to accurately model long-wave velocity modes simultaneously with Illustris-like high resolution to capture the complexities of galaxy formation and its correlations with large scale flows.Comment: 12 pages, 9 figure, submitted to Ap

    The Impact of Nonlinear Structure Formation on the Power Spectrum of Transverse Momentum Fluctuations and the Kinetic Sunyaev-Zel'dovich Effect

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    Cosmological transverse momentum fields, whose directions are perpendicular to Fourier wave vectors, induce temperature anisotropies in the cosmic microwave background via the kinetic Sunyaev-Zeldovich (kSZ) effect. The transverse momentum power spectrum contains the four-point function of density and velocity fields, δδvv\langle\delta\delta v v\rangle. In the post-reionization epoch, nonlinear effects dominate in the power spectrum. We use perturbation theory and cosmological NN-body simulations to calculate this nonlinearity. We derive the next-to-leading order expression for the power spectrum with a particular emphasis on the connected term that has been ignored in the literature. While the contribution from the connected term on small scales (k>0.1hMpc1k>0.1\,h\,\rm{Mpc}^{-1}) is subdominant relative to the unconnected term, we find that its contribution to the kSZ power spectrum at =3000\ell = 3000 at z<6z<6 can be as large as ten percent of the unconnected term, which would reduce the allowed contribution from the reionization epoch (z>6z>6) by twenty percent. The power spectrum of transverse momentum on large scales is expected to scale as k2k^2 as a consequence of momentum conservation. We show that both the leading and the next-to-leading order terms satisfy this scaling. In particular, we find that both of the unconnected and connected terms are necessary to reproduce k2k^2.Comment: 13 pages, 5 figures, Accepted to Ap

    Impact of Self-shielding Minihalos on the Lyα\alpha Forest at High Redshift

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    Dense gas in minihalos (MHs) with masses of 106108 M10^6-10^8~M_\odot can shield themselves from reionization for about 100100 megayears after being exposed to UV radiation. These self-shielded systems, often unresolved in cosmological simulations, can introduce strong absorption in quasar spectra. This paper is the first systematic study on the impact of these systems on the Lyα\alpha forest. We first derive the HI column density profile of photoevaporating MHs by conducting 1-dimensional radiation-hydrodynamics simulations. We utilize these results to estimate the Lyα\alpha opacity from minihalos in a large-scale simulation that cannot resolve the self-shielding process. When the ionization rate of the background radiation is 0.03×1012 s10.03\times 10^{-12}~{\rm s}^{-1}, as expected near the end of reionization at z5.5z\sim 5.5, we find that the incidence rate of damped Lyα\alpha absorbers, dN/dXdN/dX, increases by nearly a factor of 2 - 4 compared to at z=4.5z=4.5. The Lyα\alpha flux is, on average, suppressed by 10%10\% of its mean due to absorption by MHs. The extended absorption features contribute to a 20%\sim 20\% enhancement in the 1D power spectrum at k0.1 h Mpc1k\sim 0.1~h~{\rm Mpc}^{-1} (103 km1 s10^{-3}~{\rm km}^{-1}~{\rm s}), which is comparable to the enhancement caused by inhomogeneous reionization. Notably, the flux is particularly suppressed in the vicinity of large halos along the line-of-sight direction at separations of up to 10 h1 Mpc10~h^{-1}~{\rm Mpc} at r2 h1 Mpcr_\perp\lesssim 2~h^{-1}~{\rm Mpc}. However, these effects become much smaller for higher ionizing rates (0.30.3 and 1×1012 s11\times 10^{-12}~{\rm s}^{-1}) expected in the post-reionization universe z5.5z\lesssim5.5. Our findings highlight the need to consider the absorption by MHs when interpreting the Lyα\alpha forest at z5.5z\gtrsim5.5. Moreover, the sensitivity of this effect to the ionizing background intensity can be exploited to constrain the intensity itself.Comment: 15 pages; 11 figures; Submitted to the Ap
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