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arxiv: astro-ph/0104332 · v3 · submitted 2001-04-20 · 🌌 astro-ph

Non-gaussian CMB temperature fluctuations from peculiar velocities of clusters

classification 🌌 astro-ph
keywords effecthalodistributionpeakmassopticaldepthgaussian
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We use numerical simulations of a (480 Mpc/h)^3 volume to show that the distribution of peak heights in maps of the temperature fluctuations from the kinematic and thermal Sunyaev-Zeldovich effects will be highly non-Gaussian, and very different from the peak height distribution of a Gaussian random field. We then show that it is a good approximation to assume that each peak in either SZ effect is associated with one and only one dark matter halo. This allows us to use our knowledge of the properties of haloes to estimate the peak height distributions. At fixed optical depth, the distribution of peak heights due to the kinematic effect is Gaussian, with a width which is approximately proportional to optical depth; the non-Gaussianity comes from summing over a range of optical depths. The optical depth is an increasing function of halo mass, and the distribution of halo speeds is Gaussian, with a dispersion which is approximately independent of halo mass. This means that observations of the kinematic effect can be used to put constraints on how the abundance of massive clusters evolves, and on the evolution of cluster velocities. The non-Gaussianity of the thermal effect, on the other hand, comes primarily from the fact that, on average, the effect is larger in more massive haloes, and the distribution of halo masses is highly non-Gaussian. We also show that because haloes of the same mass may have a range of density and velocity dispersion profiles, the relation between halo mass and the amplitude of the thermal effect is not deterministic, but has some scatter.

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