Institute for Advanced Study/Princeton University Early Universe/Cosmology Lunch Discussion

Probing the Ionized Gas Thermodynamics in Distant Galaxies with the Sunyaev-Zel’dovich Effect

The Sunyaev-Zel’dovich Effect—the Doppler boost of low-energy Cosmic Microwave Background photons scattering off free electrons—is an excellent probe of ionized gas residing in distant galaxies. Its two main constituents are the kinematic SZ effect (kSZ), where electrons have a non-zero line-of-sight (LOS) velocity and which probes the electron line-of-sight momentum, and the thermal SZ effect (tSZ), where electrons have high energies due to their temperature, and which probes the electron integrated pressure. These two effects provide complementary information to constrain the thermodynamic profile of gas residing in distant galaxies, which can be further used to understand feedback processes, a necessary ingredient to describe the evolution of the large-scale structure in our Universe. Both tSZ and kSZ can be measured in cross-correlation with large-scale structure.

 

In this talk, I will discuss my ongoing measurements of the tSZ-galaxy cross-correlation using unWISE galaxies, along with the measured kSZ signal of unWISE galaxies with Planck using the projected-field estimator with the ACT DR6 data. unWISE is a galaxy catalog containing over 500 million galaxies on the full sky and consists of three subsamples of mean redshifts z=0.5, 1.1, 1.5, whose halo occupation distribution I have already constrained. If time permits, I will also present my ongoing work on mitigating foregrounds in the SZ cross-correlations, particularly the Cosmic Infrared Background (CIB). 

Date & Time

October 30, 2023 | 12:30pm – 2:00pm

Location

Peyton Hall, Grand Central

Speakers

Ola Kusiak, Columbia University