By observing a high-speed component of a massive galaxy cluster,
Caltech/JPL scientists and collaborators have detected for the first
time in an individual object the kinetic Sunyaev-Zel'dovich effect, a
change in the cosmic microwave background caused by its interaction with
massive moving objects.
The galaxy cluster was observed by a team led by Sunil Golwala,
professor of physics at Caltech and director of the Caltech
Submillimeter Observatory (CSO) in Hawaii. Subcluster B was observed
during what appears to be its first fall into MACS J0717.5+3745. Its
momentum will carry it through the center of the galaxy cluster
temporarily, but the strong gravitational pull of MACS J0717.5+3745 will
pull subcluster B back again. Eventually, subcluster B should settle in
with its stationary counterparts, subclusters A, C, and D.
Though subcluster B's behavior is dramatic, it fits neatly within the
standard cosmological model. But the details of the observations of MACS
J0717.5+3745 at different wavelengths were puzzling until they were
analyzed in terms of a theory called the kinetic Sunyaev-Zel'dovich (SZ)
effect.
In 1972, two Russian physicists, Rashid Sunyaev and Yakov Zel'dovich,
predicted that we should be able to see distortions in the cosmic
microwave background (CMB)—the afterglow of the Big Bang—whenever it
interacts with a collection of free electrons. These free electrons are
present in the intracluster medium, which is made up primarily of gas.
Gas within dense clusters of galaxies is heated to such an extreme
temperature, around 100 million degrees, that it no longer coheres into
atoms. According to Sunyaev and Zel'dovich, the photons of the CMB
should be scattered by the high-energy electrons in the intracluster
medium and take on a measurable energy boost as they pass through the
galaxy cluster.
This phenomenon, known as the thermal SZ effect, has been well supported
by observational data since the early 1980s, so it was no surprise when
MACS J0717.5+3745 showed signs of the effect. But recent observations
of this galaxy cluster yielded some curious data. A team led by Golwala
and Jamie Bock—also a Caltech professor of physics—observed MACS
J0717.5+3745 with the CSO's Bolocam instrument, measuring microwave
radiation from the cluster at two frequencies: 140 GHz and 268 GHz.
Through a simple extrapolation, the 140 GHz measurement can be used to
predict the 268 GHz measurement assuming the thermal SZ effect.
Yet observations of subcluster B at 268 GHz did not match those
expectations. The trio of Caltech and JPL postdocs who had first
proposed observations of MACS J0717.5+3745—Jack Sayers, Phil Korngut,
and Tony Mroczkowski—puzzled over these images for some time. Trying to
sort out the discrepancy, Korngut kept returning to subcluster B's rapid
velocity relative to the rest of the cluster. Prompted by Korngut's
interest, Mroczkowski decided one weekend to calculate whether the
kinetic SZ effect might explain the discrepancy between the 140 GHz and
268 GHz data. To everyone's surprise, it could. In order to show this
conclusively, the signals from dusty galaxies behind MACS J0717.5+3745
also had to be accounted for, which was done using data at higher
frequencies from the Herschel Space Observatory analyzed by Mike Zemcov,
a senior postdoctoral scholar at Caltech. The model combining the two
SZ effects and the dusty galaxies was a good match to the observations.
The kinetic SZ effect, like the thermal SZ effect, is caused by the
interaction of the extremely hot and energetic electrons in the gas of
the intracluster medium with the CMB's photons. However, in the kinetic
effect, the photons are affected not by the heat of the electrons, which
gives a random, uncoordinated motion, but instead by their coherent
motion as their host subcluster moves through space. The size of the
effect is proportional to the electrons' speed—in this case, the speed
of subcluster B.
Prior to this study of MACS J0717.5+3745, the best indication of the
kinetic SZ effect came from a statistical study of a large number of
galaxies and galaxy clusters that had been detected by the Atacama
Cosmology Telescope and the Sloan Digital Sky Survey. This is the first
time, Golwala says, "that you can point to a single object and say, 'We
think we see it, right there.'"
"By using the kinetic SZ effect to measure the velocities of whole
clusters relative to the expanding universe, we may be able to learn
more about what causes the universe's accelerating expansion," Golwala
explains. The next step in the process is the development of new, more
sensitive instrumentation, including the new Multiwavelength
Sub/millimeter Inductance Camera recently commissioned on the CSO.
The paper detailing these observations appears in Astrophysical Journal.
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