Missing baryons traced by the galaxy luminosity density in the large-scale WHIM filaments
J. Nevalainen, E. Tempel, L.J. Liivam\"agi, E. Branchini, M., Roncarelli, C. Giocoli, P. Hein\"am\"aki, E. Saar, A. Tamm, A. Finoguenov, P., Nurmi, M. Bonamente

TL;DR
This paper introduces a novel method using galaxy luminosity density as a tracer for the Warm Hot Intergalactic Medium (WHIM) to locate missing baryons in large-scale filaments, supported by simulations and observational data.
Contribution
It establishes a correlation between galaxy luminosity density and WHIM density, and applies this to identify WHIM in specific cosmic structures, validating the tracer approach.
Findings
Significant correlation between WHIM density and galaxy luminosity density.
Detection of WHIM in Sculptor Wall and Pisces-Cetus superclusters.
Method consistent with X-ray observations and not attributable to galaxy halos.
Abstract
We propose a new approach to the missing baryons problem. Building on the common assumption that the missing baryons are in the form of the Warm Hot Intergalactic Medium (WHIM), we further assumed here that the galaxy luminosity density can be used as a tracer of the WHIM. The latter assumption is supported by our finding of a significant correlation between the WHIM density and the galaxy luminosity density in the hydrodynamical simulations of Cui et al. (2012). We further found that the fraction of the gas mass in the WHIM phase is substantially (by a factor of 1.6) higher within the large scale galactic filaments, i.e. 70\%, compared to the average in the full simulation volume of 0.1\,Gpc. The relation between the WHIM overdensity and the galaxy luminosity overdensity within the galactic filaments is consistent with linear: $\delta_{\rm…
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