Decoding the cosmological baryonic fluctuations using localized fast radio bursts
Tzu-Yin Hsu, Tetsuya Hashimoto, Tsung-Ching Yang, Shotaro Yamasaki,, Tomotsugu Goto, John Lo, Po-Ya Wang, Yu-Wei Lin, Simon C.-C. Ho, and Bjorn, Jasper R. Raquel

TL;DR
This study provides statistical evidence that cosmological baryonic matter fluctuates on scales less than 6 Mpc, by correlating dispersion measures of fast radio bursts with foreground galaxy densities.
Contribution
It introduces a novel statistical analysis linking FRB dispersion measures with galaxy densities to confirm baryonic fluctuations in the universe.
Findings
Positive correlation between DM and galaxy density with high significance.
Baryonic matter density varies outside galaxies, exceeding average in dense regions.
Baryonic fluctuations occur on scales smaller than 6 Mpc.
Abstract
Aims: The enigma of the missing baryons poses a prominent and unresolved problem in astronomy. Dispersion measures (DM) serve as a distinctive observable of fast radio bursts (FRBs). They quantify the electron column density along each line of sight and reveal the missing baryons that are described in the Macquart (DM-z) relation. The scatter of this relation is anticipated to be caused by the variation in the cosmic structure. This is not yet statistically confirmed, however. We present statistical evidence that the cosmological baryons fluctuate. Methods: We measured the foreground galaxy number densities around 14 and 13 localized FRBs with the WISE-PS1-STRM and WISE x SCOS photometric redshift galaxy catalog, respectively. The foreground galaxy number densities were determined through a comparison with measured random apertures with a radius of 1 Mpc. Results: We found a positive…
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Taxonomy
TopicsRadio Astronomy Observations and Technology · Computational Physics and Python Applications · Cosmology and Gravitation Theories
