Cosmological Constraints from Gas Mass Fractions of Massive, Relaxed Galaxy Clusters
Adam B. Mantz, Steven W. Allen, Rebecca E. A. Canning, Lucie Baumont,, Bradford Benson, Lindsey E. Bleem, Steven R. Ehlert, Benjamin Floyd, Ricardo, Herbonnet, Patrick L. Kelly, Shuang Liang, Anja von der Linden, Michael, McDonald, David A. Rapetti, Robert W. Schmidt

TL;DR
This study uses gas mass fraction measurements of galaxy clusters to refine constraints on cosmological parameters, including dark energy properties and the Hubble constant, achieving results comparable to other leading methods.
Contribution
It provides updated cosmological constraints using an expanded and improved dataset of galaxy cluster gas fractions, enhancing the precision of dark energy and curvature measurements.
Findings
Hubble constant estimated at 0.722 ± 0.067
Dark energy density constrained to 0.865 ± 0.119
Gas fraction scaling consistent with a constant, 3% intrinsic scatter
Abstract
We present updated cosmological constraints from measurements of the gas mass fractions () of massive, dynamically relaxed galaxy clusters. Our new data set has greater leverage on models of dark energy, thanks to the addition of the Perseus Cluster at low redshifts, two new clusters at redshifts , and significantly longer observations of four clusters at . Our low-redshift () data, combined with the cosmic baryon fraction measured from the cosmic microwave background (CMB), imply a Hubble constant of . Combining the full data set with priors on the cosmic baryon density and the Hubble constant, we constrain the dark energy density to be in non-flat CDM (cosmological constant) models, and its equation of state to be in flat, constant-w…
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