Too big, too early? Multiple high-redshift galaxy clusters: implications

Publication date

2019-04-08T11:06:02Z

2019-04-08T11:06:02Z

2011-05-04

2019-04-08T11:06:03Z

Abstract

To date, 14 high-redshift ( z > 1.0 ) galaxy clusters with mass measurements have been observed, spectroscopically confirmed, and are reported in the literature. These objects should be exceedingly rare in the standard Λ cold dark matter ( Λ CDM ) model. We conservatively approximate the selection functions of these clusters' parent surveys and quantify the tension between the abundances of massive clusters as predicted by the standard Λ CDM model and the observed ones. We alleviate the tension, considering non-Gaussian primordial perturbations of the local type, characterized by the parameter f NL , and derive constraints on f NL arising from the mere existence of these clusters. At the 95 % confidence level, f NL > 467 , with cosmological parameters fixed to their most likely WMAP5 values, or f NL ≳ 123 (at 95 % confidence) if we marginalize over prior WMAP5 parameters. In combination with f NL constraints from cosmic microwave background and halo bias, this determination implies a scale dependence of f NL at ≃ 3 σ . Given the assumptions made in the analysis, we expect any future improvements to the modeling of the non-Gaussian mass function, survey volumes, or selection functions to increase the significance of f NL > 0 found here. In order to reconcile these massive, high- z clusters with f NL = 0 , their masses would need to be systematically lowered by 1.5 σ , or the σ 8 parameter should be ∼ 3 σ higher than cosmic microwave background (and large-scale structure) constraints. The existence of these objects is a puzzle: it either represents a challenge to the Λ CDM paradigm or it is an indication that the mass estimates of clusters are dramatically more uncertain than we think.

Document Type

Article


Published version

Language

English

Publisher

American Physical Society

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Reproducció del document publicat a: https://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevD.83.103502

Physical Review D, 2011, vol. 83, num. 10, p. 103502

https://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevD.83.103502

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(c) American Physical Society, 2011

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