Abstract

ABSTRACT We quantify two main pathways through which baryonic physics biases cluster count cosmology. We create mock cluster samples that reproduce the baryon content inferred from X-ray observations. We link clusters to their counterparts in a dark matter-only universe, whose abundances can be predicted robustly, by assuming the dark matter density profile is not significantly affected by baryons. We derive weak lensing halo masses and infer the best-fitting cosmological parameters Ωm, S8 = σ8(Ωm/0.3)0.2, and w0 from the mock cluster sample. We find that because of the need to accommodate the change in the density profile due to the ejection of baryons, weak lensing mass calibrations are only unbiased if the concentration is left free when fitting the reduced shear with NFW profiles. However, even unbiased total mass estimates give rise to biased cosmological parameters if the measured mass functions are compared with predictions from dark matter-only simulations. This bias dominates for haloes with $m_\mathrm{500c} \lt 10^{14.5} \, \rm h^{-1} \, \mathrm{M_\odot }$. For a stage IV-like cluster survey without mass estimation uncertainties, an area $\approx 15\,000 \, \mathrm{deg^2}$ and a constant mass cut of $m_\mathrm{200m,min} = 10^{14} \,\rm h^{-1} \, \mathrm{M_\odot }$, the biases are $-11 \pm 1 \, \mathrm{per\, cent}$ in Ωm, $-3.29 \pm 0.04 \, \mathrm{per\, cent}$ in S8, and $9 \pm 1.5 \, \mathrm{per\, cent}$ in w0. The statistical significance of the baryonic bias depends on how accurately the actual uncertainty on individual cluster mass estimates is known. We suggest that rather than the total halo mass, the (re-scaled) dark matter mass inferred from the combination of weak lensing and observations of the hot gas, should be used for cluster count cosmology.

Highlights

  • Clusters of galaxies are sensitive probes of structure formation in a universe where structure forms hierarchically, because they are still actively forming

  • We have introduced a phenomenological model that reproduces the baryon content inferred from the X-ray surface brightness profiles of the average observed cluster population in the REXCESS survey

  • We set out to investigate the implications for cluster count cosmology of the disconnect between the robust theoretical understanding of cluster-sized (m500c > 1014 h−1 M ) dark matter-only haloes and the observed cluster population, an issue which was pointed out by Cui et al (2014), Cusworth et al (2014), and Velliscig et al (2014)

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Summary

INTRODUCTION

Clusters of galaxies are sensitive probes of structure formation in a universe where structure forms hierarchically, because they are still actively forming. To isolate the effect of the change in the halo density profile due to baryons, we generated idealized, spherical clusters that consist of dark matter and hot gas that reproduces the observed cluster X-ray emission, bypassing the large inherent uncertainties associated with the assumed subgrid models in hydrodynamical simulations. These models allow us to study the bias in the inferred halo masses for a standard, mock weak lensing analysis that assumes NFW density profiles.

HALO MASS MODEL
Linking observed and DMO haloes
Including observations of baryons
Fitting the gas density profiles
MOCK OBSERVATIONAL ANALYSIS
Mock cluster sample generation
Stage III-like survey
Stage IV-like survey
APERTURE MASSES
Findings
DISCUSSION
CONCLUSIONS
Full Text
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