Do you want to publish a course? Click here

Probing cosmology and gastrophysics with fast radio bursts: Cross-correlations of dark matter haloes and cosmic dispersion measures

74   0   0.0 ( 0 )
 Added by Masato Shirasaki
 Publication date 2021
  fields Physics
and research's language is English




Ask ChatGPT about the research

The column density of free electrons with a cosmological-scale depth, cosmic dispersion measures (DMs), is among the most interesting observables in future transient surveys at radio wavelengths. For future surveys of fast radio bursts (FRBs), we clarify information available from cosmic DMs through cross-correlation analyses of foreground dark matter haloes (hosting galaxies and galaxy clusters) with their known redshifts. With a halo-model approach, we predict that the cross-correlation with cluster-sized haloes is less affected by the details of gastrophysics, providing robust cosmological information. For less massive haloes, the cross-correlation at angular scales of $<10, mathrm{arcmin}$ is sensitive to gas expelled from the halo centre due to galactic feedback. Assuming $20000$ FRBs over $20000 , {rm deg}^2$ with a localisation error being 3 arcmin, we expect that the cross-correlation signal at halo masses of $10^{12}$-$10^{14}, M_odot$ can be measured with a level of $sim 1%$ precision in a redshift range of $0<z<1$. Such precise measurements enable to put a $1.5%$ level constraint on $sigma_8, (Omega_mathrm{M}/0.3)^{0.5}$ and a $3%$ level constraint on $(Omega_mathrm{b}/0.049)(h/0.67)(f_mathrm{e}/0.95)$ ($sigma_8$, $Omega_mathrm{M}$, $Omega_mathrm{b}$, $h$ and $f_mathrm{e}$ are the linear mass variance smoothed at $8, h^{-1}mathrm{Mpc}$, mean mass density, mean baryon density, the present-day Hubble parameter and fraction of free electrons in cosmic baryons today), whereas the gas-to-halo mass relation in galaxies and clusters can be constrained with a level of $10%$-$20%$. Furthermore the cross-correlation analyses can break the degeneracy among $Omega_mathrm{b}$, $h$ and $f_mathrm{e}$, inherent in the DM-redshift relation.



rate research

Read More

Understanding the origin of fast radio bursts (FRBs) is a central unsolved problem in astrophysics that is severely hampered by their poorly determined distance scale. Determining the redshift distribution of FRBs appears to require arcsecond angular resolution, in order to associate FRBs with host galaxies. In this paper, we forecast prospects for determining the redshift distribution without host galaxy associations, by cross-correlating FRBs with a galaxy catalog such as the SDSS photometric sample. The forecasts are extremely promising: a survey such as CHIME/FRB that measures catalogs of $sim 10^3$ FRBs with few-arcminute angular resolution can place strong constraints on the FRB redshift distribution, by measuring the cross-correlation as a function of galaxy redshift $z$ and FRB dispersion measure $D$. In addition, propagation effects from free electron inhomogeneities modulate the observed FRB number density, either by shifting FRBs between dispersion measure (DM) bins or through DM-dependent selection effects. We show that these propagation effects, coupled with the spatial clustering between galaxies and free electrons, can produce FRB-galaxy correlations which are comparable to the intrinsic clustering signal. Such effects can be disentangled based on their angular and $(z, D)$ dependence, providing an opportunity to study not only FRBs but the clustering of free electrons.
We investigate the possibility of measuring intergalactic magnetic fields using the dispersion measures and rotation measures of fast radio bursts. With Bayesian methods, we produce probability density functions for values of these measures. We distinguish between contributions from the intergalactic medium, the host galaxy and the local environment of the progenitor. To this end, we use constrained, magnetohydrodynamic simulations of the local Universe to compute lines-of-sight integrals from the position of the Milky Way. In particular, we differentiate between predominantly astrophysical and primordial origins of magnetic fields in the intergalactic medium. We test different possible types of host galaxies and probe different distribution functions of fast radio burst progenitor locations inside the host galaxy. Under the assumption that fast radio bursts are produced by magnetars, we use analytic predictions to account for the contribution of the local environment. We find that less than 100 fast radio bursts from magnetars in stellar-wind environments hosted by starburst dwarf galaxies at redshift $z gtrsim 0.5$ suffice to discriminate between predominantly primordial and astrophysical origins of intergalactic magnetic fields. However, this requires the contribution of the Milky Way to be removed with a precision of $approx 1 rm~rad~m^{-2}$. We show the potential existence of a subset of fast radio bursts whose rotation measure carry information on the strength of the intergalactic magnetic field and its origins.
Fast Radios Bursts (FRBs) show large dispersion measures (DMs), suggesting an extragalactic location. We analyze the DMs of the 11 known FRBs in detail and identify steps as integer multiples of half the lowest DM found, 187.5cm$^{-3}$ pc, so that DMs occur in groups centered at 375, 562, 750, 937, 1125cm$^{-3}$ pc, with errors observed <5%. We estimate the likelhood of a coincidence as 5:10,000. We speculate that this could originate from a Galaxy population of FRBs, with Milky Way DM contribution as model deviations, and an underlying generator process that produces FRBs with DMs in discrete steps. However, we find that FRBs tend to arrive at close to the full integer second, like man-made perytons. If this holds, FRBs would also be man-made. This can be verified, or refuted, with new FRBs to be detected.
99 - Z. J. Zhang , K. Yan , C. M. Li 2020
Fast radio bursts (FRBs) are millisecond-duration radio transients and can be used as a cosmological probe. However, the dispersion measure (DM) contributed by intergalactic medium (IGM) is hard to be distinguished from other components. In this paper, we use the IllustrisTNG simulation to realistically estimate the $DM_{rm IGM}$ up to $zsim 9$. We find $DM_{rm IGM} = 892^{+721}_{-270}$ pc cm$^{-3}$ at $z=1$. The probability distribution of $DM_{rm IGM}$ can be well fitted by a quasi-Gaussian function with a long tail. The tail is caused by the structures along the line of sight in IGM. Subtracting DM contributions from the Milky Way and host galaxy for localized FRBs, the $DM_{rm IGM}$ value is close to the derived $DM_{rm IGM}-z$ relation. We also show the capability to constrain the cosmic reionization history with the $DM_{rm IGM}$ of high-redshift FRBs in the IllustrisTNG universe. The derived $DM_{rm IGM}-z$ relation at high redshifts can be well fitted by a $tanh$ reionization model with the reionization redshift $z=5.95$, which is compatible with the reionization model used by the IllustrisTNG simulation. The $DM_{rm IGM}$ of high-redshift FRBs also provides an independent way to measure the optical depth of cosmic microwave background (CMB). Our result can be used to derive the pseudo-redshifts of non-localized FRBs for $DM_{rm IGM}<4000$ pc cm$^{-3}$.
We explore the possibility that the Fast Radio Bursts (FRBs) are powered by magnetic reconnection in magnetars, triggered by Axion Quark Nugget (AQN) dark matter. In this model, the magnetic reconnection is ignited by the shock wave which develops when the nuggets Mach number $M gg 1$. These shock waves generate very strong and very short impulses expressed in terms of pressure $Delta p/psim M^2$ and temperature $Delta T/Tsim M^2$ in the vicinity of (would be) magnetic reconnection area. We find that the proposed mechanism produces a coherent emission which is consistent with current data, in particular the FRB energy requirements, the observed energy distribution, the frequency range and the burst duration. Our model allows us to propose additional tests which future data will be able to challenge.
comments
Fetching comments Fetching comments
Sign in to be able to follow your search criteria
mircosoft-partner

هل ترغب بارسال اشعارات عن اخر التحديثات في شمرا-اكاديميا