학술논문

A blind detection of a large, complex, Sunyaev-Zel'dovich structure.
Document Type
Article
Source
Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society. Jun2012, Vol. 423 Issue 2, p1463-1473. 11p. 7 Charts, 9 Graphs.
Subject
*ASTRONOMICAL observations
*GALAXY clusters
*BAYESIAN analysis
*PHENOMENOLOGICAL theory (Physics)
*ANISOTROPY
*METAPHYSICAL cosmology
*REDSHIFT
*SENSITIVITY analysis
Language
ISSN
0035-8711
Abstract
ABSTRACT We present an interesting Sunyaev-Zel'dovich (SZ) detection in the first of the Arcminute Microkelvin Imager (AMI) 'blind', degree-square fields to have been observed down to our target sensitivity of . In follow-up deep pointed observations the SZ effect is detected with a maximum peak decrement greater than eight times the thermal noise. No corresponding emission is visible in the ROSAT all-sky X-ray survey and no cluster is evident in the Palomar all-sky optical survey. Compared with existing SZ images of distant clusters, the extent is large (≈10 arcmin) and complex; our analysis favours a model containing two clusters rather than a single cluster. Our Bayesian analysis is currently limited to modelling each cluster with an ellipsoidal or spherical β model, which does not do justice to this decrement. Fitting an ellipsoid to the deeper candidate we find the following. (a) Assuming that the Evrard et al. approximation to Press & Schechter correctly gives the number density of clusters as a function of mass and redshift, then, in the search area, the formal Bayesian probability ratio of the AMI detection of this cluster is 7.9 × 104:1; alternatively assuming Jenkins et al. as the true prior, the formal Bayesian probability ratio of detection is 2.1 × 105:1. (b) The cluster mass is . (c) Abandoning a physical model with number density prior and instead simply modelling the SZ decrement using a phenomenological β model of temperature decrement as a function of angular distance, we find a central SZ temperature decrement of K - this allows for cosmic microwave background primary anisotropies, receiver noise and radio sources. We are unsure if the cluster system we observe is a merging system or two separate clusters. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]