Statistics of thermal gas pressure as a probe of cosmology and galaxy formation
Ziyang Chen, Drew Jamieson, Eiichiro Komatsu, Sownak Bose, Klaus, Dolag, Boryana Hadzhiyska, C\'esar Hern\'andez-Aguayo, Lars Hernquist, Rahul, Kannan, R\"uediger Pakmor, Volker Springel

TL;DR
This paper explores how the statistics of thermal gas pressure, measured via the thermal Sunyaev-Zeldovich effect, can serve as a new probe for cosmology and galaxy formation, revealing tensions with simulations and potential insights into fundamental parameters.
Contribution
It demonstrates the sensitivity of the mean electron pressure to cosmological parameters and compares observational data with hydrodynamical simulations, highlighting discrepancies and the potential for future constraints.
Findings
Observed pressure is lower than simulation predictions at z<0.5.
Differences between simulations are small at z<2.
High-redshift measurements show tension with existing bounds.
Abstract
The statistics of thermal gas pressure are a new and promising probe of cosmology and astrophysics. The large-scale cross-correlation between galaxies and the thermal Sunyaev-Zeldovich effect gives the bias-weighted mean electron pressure, . In this paper, we show that is sensitive to the amplitude of fluctuations in matter density, for example at redshift . We find that at the observed is smaller than that predicted by the state-of-the-art hydrodynamical simulations of galaxy formation, MillenniumTNG, by a factor of . This can be explained by a lower value of and , similar to the so-called " tension'' seen in the gravitational lensing…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAstrophysics and Star Formation Studies · Galaxies: Formation, Evolution, Phenomena · Stellar, planetary, and galactic studies
