Future high-resolution microwave background measurements hold the promise of
detecting galaxy clusters throughout our Hubble volume through their
Sunyaev-Zel'dovich (SZ) signature, down to a given limiting flux. The number
density of galaxy clusters is highly sensitive to cluster mass through
fluctuations in the matter power spectrum, as well as redshift through the
comoving volume and the growth factor. This sensitivity in principle allows
tight constraints on such quantities as the equation of state of dark energy
and the neutrino mass. We evaluate the ability of future cluster surveys to
measure these quantities simultaneously when combined with PLANCK-like CMB
data. Using a simple effective model for uncertainties in the cluster mass-SZ
flux relation, we evaluate systematic shifts in cosmological constraints from
cluster SZ surveys. We find that a systematic bias of 10% in cluster mass
measurements can give rise to shifts in cosmological parameter estimates at
levels larger than the 1σ statistical errors. Systematic errors are
unlikely to be detected from the mass and redshift dependence of cluster number
counts alone; increasing survey size has only a marginal effect. Implications
for upcoming experiments are discussed.Comment: 12 pages, 6 figures; accepted to JCAP; revised to match submitted
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