FLIMFLAM DR1: The First Constraints on the Cosmic Baryon Distribution from 8 FRB sightlines
Ilya S. Khrykin, Metin Ata, Khee-Gan Lee, Sunil Simha, Yuxin Huang, J., Xavier Prochaska, Nicolas Tejos, Keith W. Bannister, Jeff Cooke, Cherie K., Day, Adam Deller, Marcin Glowacki, Alexa C. Gordon, Clancy W. James, Lachlan, Marnoch, Ryan. M. Shannon, Jielai Zhang

TL;DR
This paper presents the first constraints on the distribution of cosmic baryons between the intergalactic medium and circumgalactic medium using 8 localized FRB sightlines, combining Bayesian inference with spectroscopic data.
Contribution
It introduces a novel method to constrain the cosmic baryon partition and separates the FRB host dispersion measure into halo and ISM components.
Findings
IGM baryon fraction estimated at ~0.59
CGM gas fraction estimated at ~0.55 for certain halo masses
First systematic separation of FRB host DM into halo and ISM contributions
Abstract
The dispersion measure of fast radio bursts (FRBs), arising from the interactions of the pulses with free electrons along the propagation path, constitutes a unique probe of the cosmic baryon distribution. Their constraining power is further enhanced in combination with observations of the foreground large-scale structure and intervening galaxies. In this work, we present the first constraints on the partition of the cosmic baryons between the intergalactic medium (IGM) and circumgalactic medium (CGM), inferred from the FLIMFLAM spectroscopic survey. In its first data release, the FLIMFLAM survey targeted galaxies in the foreground of 8 localized FRBs. Using Bayesian techniques, we reconstruct the underlying ~Mpc-scale matter density field that is traced by the IGM gas. Simultaneously, deeper spectroscopy of intervening foreground galaxies (at impact parameters $b_\perp \lesssim…
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Taxonomy
TopicsParticle physics theoretical and experimental studies · Computational Physics and Python Applications · Geophysics and Gravity Measurements
