The rise and fall of a challenger: the Bullet Cluster in $\Lambda$ Cold Dark Matter simulations
Robert Thompson, Romeel Dav\'e, and Kentaro Nagamine

TL;DR
This study uses advanced N-body simulations with velocity-aware halo finders to show that the Bullet Cluster's high-velocity progenitors are consistent with the $ m{ extbf{ extLambda}}$CDM model, challenging previous assumptions of inconsistency.
Contribution
It demonstrates that the probability of Bullet-like pairs is higher when using velocity-sensitive halo finders, aligning observations with $ m{ extLambda}$CDM predictions.
Findings
Velocity-aware halo finders increase Bullet-like pair detection.
Probability of Bullet-like pairs is about 4.6e-4 with ROCKSTAR.
Bullet-like progenitors are consistent with $ m{ extLambda}$CDM]$.
Abstract
The Bullet Cluster has provided some of the best evidence for the cold dark matter () model via direct empirical proof of the existence of collisionless dark matter, while posing a serious challenge owing to the unusually high inferred pairwise velocities of its progenitor clusters. Here we investigate the probability of finding such a high-velocity pair in large-volume N-body simulations, particularly focusing on differences between halo finding algorithms. We find that algorithms that do not account for the kinematics of infalling groups yield vastly different statistics and probabilities. When employing the ROCKSTAR halo finder that considers particle velocities, we find numerous Bullet-like pair candidates that closely match not only the high pairwise velocity, but also the mass, mass ratio, separation distance, and collision angle of the initial…
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Taxonomy
TopicsGeophysics and Gravity Measurements · Cosmology and Gravitation Theories · Geomagnetism and Paleomagnetism Studies
