Measuring the dark flow with public X-ray cluster data
A. Kashlinsky, F. Atrio-Barandela, H. Ebeling

TL;DR
This study detects a statistically significant dark flow via the dipole in galaxy cluster velocities using WMAP data and X-ray catalogs, confirming earlier findings and providing new empirical insights.
Contribution
It presents the first tentative empirical confirmation that filtering flips the KSZ effect sign, supporting previous dark flow measurements with improved data.
Findings
Detected a 3-4 sigma significant dipole aligned with galaxy clusters.
Confirmed the dipole amplitude correlates with X-ray luminosity.
Provided publicly available maps and templates for independent verification.
Abstract
We present new results on the "dark flow" from a measurement of the dipole in the distribution of peculiar velocities of galaxy clusters, applying the methodology proposed and developed by us earlier. Our latest measurement is conducted using new, low-noise 7-yr WMAP data as well as an all-sky sample of X-ray selected galaxy clusters compiled exclusively from published catalogs. Our analysis of the CMB signature of the kinematic Sunyaev-Zeldovich (SZ) effect finds a statistically significant dipole at the location of galaxy clusters. The residual dipole outside the cluster regions is small, rendering our overall measurement 3-4 sigma significant. The amplitude of the dipole correlates with cluster properties, being larger for the most X-ray luminous clusters, as required if the signal is produced by the SZ effect. Since it is measured at zero monopole, the dipole can not be due to the…
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