Planck intermediate results. XIII. Constraints on peculiar velocities
Planck Collaboration: P. A. R. Ade, N. Aghanim, M. Arnaud, M. Ashdown,, J. Aumont, C. Baccigalupi, A. Balbi, A. J. Banday, R. B. Barreiro, E., Battaner, K. Benabed, A. Benoit-Levy, J.-P. Bernard, M. Bersanelli, P., Bielewicz, I. Bikmaev, J. Bobin, J. J. Bock, A. Bonaldi

TL;DR
Using Planck data and galaxy cluster catalogs, the study constrains peculiar velocities and bulk flows, finding results consistent with the standard Lambda-CDM cosmological model and ruling out large inhomogeneous void models.
Contribution
This paper provides new constraints on cosmic peculiar velocities and bulk flows using Planck data, improving limits on deviations from homogeneity and dark energy models.
Findings
Average radial peculiar velocity is less than 72 km/s at 1 sigma.
Upper limit on bulk flow amplitude is 254 km/s at 95% confidence.
Results are consistent with Lambda-CDM predictions and rule out large inhomogeneous void models.
Abstract
Using \Planck\ data combined with the Meta Catalogue of X-ray detected Clusters of galaxies (MCXC), we address the study of peculiar motions by searching for evidence of the kinetic Sunyaev-Zeldovich effect (kSZ). By implementing various filters designed to extract the kSZ generated at the positions of the clusters, we obtain consistent constraints on the radial peculiar velocity average, root mean square (rms), and local bulk flow amplitude at different depths. For the whole cluster sample of average redshift 0.18, the measured average radial peculiar velocity with respect to the cosmic microwave background (CMB) radiation at that redshift, i.e., the kSZ monopole, amounts to km s. This constitutes less than 1% of the relative Hubble velocity of the cluster sample with respect to our local CMB frame. While the linear CDM prediction for the typical cluster…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
