The Kinematic Sunyaev-Zel'dovich Effect with Projected Fields: A Novel Probe of the Baryon Distribution with Planck, WMAP, and WISE Data
J. Colin Hill, Simone Ferraro, Nick Battaglia, Jia Liu, David N., Spergel

TL;DR
This paper introduces a new projected-field estimator for the kinematic Sunyaev-Zel'dovich effect that enables baryon distribution measurements from large imaging surveys without requiring individual redshift data, providing tight constraints consistent with cosmological models.
Contribution
The paper presents a novel kSZ estimator based on projected fields that does not need redshift estimates, allowing application to large imaging surveys and improving baryon distribution constraints.
Findings
Measured the kSZ effect at 3.8-4.5σ significance.
Constrained baryon fraction and free electron fraction with high precision.
Verified baryons trace dark matter distribution down to Mpc scales.
Abstract
The kinematic Sunyaev-Zel'dovich (kSZ) effect --- the Doppler boosting of cosmic microwave background (CMB) photons due to Compton-scattering off free electrons with non-zero bulk velocity --- probes the abundance and distribution of baryons in the Universe. All kSZ measurements to date have explicitly required spectroscopic redshifts. Here, we implement a novel estimator for the kSZ -- large-scale structure cross-correlation based on projected fields: it does not require redshift estimates for individual objects, allowing kSZ measurements from large-scale imaging surveys. We apply this estimator to cleaned CMB temperature maps constructed from Planck and Wilkinson Microwave Anisotropy Probe data and a galaxy sample from the Wide-field Infrared Survey Explorer (WISE). We measure the kSZ effect at 3.8-4.5 significance, depending on the use of additional WISE galaxy bias…
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