The Synchrotron Cosmic Web: What is it and how might we find it?
Transcription
The Synchrotron Cosmic Web: What is it and how might we find it?
The Synchrotron Cosmic Web ! ASKAP 2016 Tessa Vernstrom Bryan Gaensler, Shea Brown, MWA Collaboration What is the Cosmic Web?! • Fluctuations in the primordial matter density result in the growth of large-scale structure (LSS) • The Cold Dark Matter (CDM) theory predicts that massive galaxies and galaxy clusters were built from smaller galaxies that collided and merged • Result is clusters, filaments, and voids we see today which form a “web” like structure (Movie: http://cosmicweb.uchicago.edu/ ) The Synchrotron Cosmic Web! • Intergalactic shocks from infall into and along filaments accelerate electrons and amplify magnetic fields à producing synchrotron emission (Keshet et al. 2004; Hoeft & Brüggen 2007; Battaglia et al. 2009; Araya-Melo et al. 2012) • Faint synchrotron radiation should trace large-scale structure and cosmic filaments • Signal should dominate other radio signals on scales ~ 10′ to 1o at frequencies ~100 MHz MHD simulation of magnetised large-scale structure (Brüggen et al. 2005) Injected fields vs primordial fields (Donnert, Dolag et al. 2008) The Synchrotron Cosmic Web! Vazza et al., 2015, 2016 MHD simulations – 14 sq deg Diffuse Synchrotron Redshift bins Sum over redshifts Thermal gas/ X-ray Why is it important?! • Could provide direct image of large-scale structure of the universe • Laboratory for studying particle acceleration in low-density shocks • Magnetic field strength of the intergalactic medium • Direct discriminant on competing models for the origin of cosmic magnetism • Discriminant on competing models of structure formation • Solve the “missing baryon” problem Planelles & Quillis (2013) How can we detect it?! • Direct imaging (Bagchi et al. 2002; Wilcots 2004; Vazza et al. 2014) • Statistical methods: • Cross Correlation (Brown et al. 2010, 2011) • Stacking • Polarisation: • Faraday rotation from background AGN • Dispersion from fast radio bursts • Also stacking and cross correlation Direct Imaging ! • We have detected diffuse emission in clusters • • • • Halos Mini-halos Relics But only ~50-100 detected • No detection of filaments yet Complications: • Predicted emission faint and low surface brightness • Predicted sub μJy/arcmin2 to mJy/arcmin2 • Requires high sensitivity to large angular scales • Sizes on Mpc scales • Difficult for radio interferometer telescopes • Bright Galactic foregrounds • Bright point sources • Faint point source confusion Ferretti et al., 2012 Cross Correlation! • Galaxy number density à traces thermal baryon distribution à should correlate with diffuse synchrotron Cross Correlation! • Galaxy number density à traces thermal baryon distribution à should correlate with diffuse synchrotron 2MASS Galaxy Distribution coded by redshift (photo credit :Thomas Jarrett (IPAC/Caltech) Simulated radio synchrotron (credit: Klaus Dolag) Cross Correlation! • Galaxy number density à traces thermal baryon distribution à should correlate with diffuse synchrotron • How correlated as a function of distance or angular scale? • Unknown • How correlated? • Unknown • Cross correlation function: how correlated as a function of angular distance – image plane • Cross power spectrum: how correlated as a function of angular size – Fourier plane • Reasons for a positive correlation: • • • • • • AGN (core) Starbursts and disk emission AGN (WAT and NAT associated with clusters) Cluster halos Cluster relics Synchrotron cosmic web • Reasons for a negative correlation: • Galactic extinction (galaxy number counts down, synchrotron up) Increasing angular scale Cross Correlation with MWA! The MWA: • Frequency range: 80 – 300 MHZ • 2048 dual polarization dipoles • Number of antenna tiles: 128 • Number of baselines: 8128 • Approximate collecting area: 2000 sq. meters • Field of view: 15 - 50 deg. (200 - 2500 sq. deg.) • Instantaneous bandwidth: 30.72 MHz • Spectral resolution: 40 kHz • Temporal resolution: 0.5 seconds • Polarization: I, Q, U, V Photo credit: Natasha Hurley-Walker Good sensitivity to large angular scales, low frequency, large field of view Cross Correlation with MWA! Field: EoR0 RA=0 Dec= -27 Full 2MASS Point source sub WISE Point source & Galaxy sub HYPER LEDA Cross Correlation with MWA! Take radial average Δθ Δθ Cross Correlation with MWA! Point Sourcesà smaller than beam Diffuse emission à larger than beam Still some point source contribution So how much diffuse is there ??? Cross Correlation with MWA ! Limits on Diffuse emission ? • But how? No model of what it should be…. • Can get help from simulations • And observations Cross Correlation! • Coma Cluster With point sources (Kronberg et al., 2007) • Halo and relic With cluster optical galaxy positions Without point sources Relic Halo Cross Correlation with MWA ! Limits on Diffuse emission ? • But how? No model of what it should be…. • Can get help from simulations • And observations • Diffuse model: • • • • Choose sum of 3 Gaussians Convolve with number density Convolve with beam Scale • Cross correlate model with number density map • Compare to the data cross correlation and fit • Point Source Model: • • Run source finder and create model from that Convolve with beam Cross Correlation with MWA ! In progress / Continuing work: • Use model fitting to set limits on temperature and/or magnetic field • Effect of redshift/binning • Cross power • Different MWA field (same results?) • Other LSS tracers ( X-ray? ) Things to consider: • Beam shapes • Point source subtraction • Other effects (Galaxy, ionosphere, etc.) • Realistic models à need help from simulations Ideal Observational Setup! FIELD FREQUENCY • Large area • Low Galactic contamination • Multi-wavelength coverage • Low (ish) • • Too low à stronger Galaxy Too high à weaker signal RESOLUTION UV COVERAGE • High (arcsecs) • Good (continuous) coverage • • Minimize sidelobes Deeper cleaning • Point source subtraction • Low (arcmins) • Diffuse emission SENSITIVITY • Low instrumental rms • Good sensitivity to large and small angular scales Conclusions! • Many reasons to look for the cosmic web • Missing baryons, origin of cosmic magnetism, …. • Many possible methods of detection • Direct imaging, statistical methods, …. • Many new telescopes/surveys/data coming soon • MWA, LOFAR, ASKAP, MeerKAT, SKA, …. à Many reasons to think exciting new results in the near future