Southern African Large Telescope Observations of ACT SZ-Selected Clusters - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

About This Presentation
Title:

Southern African Large Telescope Observations of ACT SZ-Selected Clusters

Description:

Southern African Large Telescope Observations of ACT SZ-Selected Clusters Brian Kirk Catherine Cress, Matt Hilton, Steve Crawford, Jack Hughes, Felipe Menanteau, etc – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:102
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 20
Provided by: BrianK184
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: Southern African Large Telescope Observations of ACT SZ-Selected Clusters


1
Southern African Large Telescope Observations of
ACT SZ-Selected Clusters
  • Brian Kirk
  • Catherine Cress, Matt Hilton, Steve Crawford,
    Jack Hughes, Felipe Menanteau, etc
  • Centre for High Performance Computing, UKZN,
    SAAO, Rutgers Univ
  • Recontres du Vietnam July 28 August 3, 2013
  • Quy Nhon, Vietnam

http//mcdonaldobservatory.org/sites/default/files
/images/news/gallery/salt.startrails.jpg
2
Evolution of Structure through Time
  • Structure of galaxies, clusters of galaxies,
    super clusters, etc. form through gravitational
    collapse of density fluctuations seen in the CMB.
  • How structure evolves and how it appears to us
    depends on cosmological parameters.
  • Our goal is to sample galaxy clusters as a
    function of z to constrain these cosmological
    parameters.
  • w value has an affect on the number density of
    clusters over a given SZ detection threshold
  • w value of curve peak from top to bottom -1,
    -0.6, -0.3, 0

Haiman et al (2001)?
3
The Atacama Cosmology Telescope (ACT)
4
(No Transcript)
5
Sunyaev-Zeldovich effect
  • Hot gas (107K) exists in galaxy cluster
    environments.
  • CMB photons colliding with the hot gas get
    up-scattered to higher frequencies by the inverse
    Compton effect.
  • Hot e-s give up their energy to radio photons.
  • ACT maps show galaxy clusters as holes in the CMB
    sky at radio ? s and as bright patches at mm
    ?s.

Visible X-ray
6
(No Transcript)
7
SZ Effect Signals of Clusters
8
Cluster Follow Up with SALT
9
http//www.astro.wisc.edu/salt/SALT-suth.jpg
10
Why we do optical follow-up
  • Sunyaev Zel-Dovich Mass Relation (YM relation)
  • Calibrate YM relation with cluster masses
  • Using the cluster locations identified by ACT, we
    measure redshifts of galaxies and velocity
    dispersions of the cluster so masses can be
    estimated

11
SALT Specs
  • 11m primary composed of 91 hexagonal mirrors
  • Fixed altitude
  • Spherical mirror
  • Robert Stobie Spectrograph (RSS)
  • It is the largest telescope in the Southern
    Hemisphere

http//images2.wikia.nocookie.net/__cb201102161600
51/saltsutherland/images/6/61/Primary.jpg
http//kelltrill.files.wordpress.com/2011/03/set-0
2-03.jpg
12
Clusters lie within SDSS S82 allow visual
confirmation (include this slide?)
13
(No Transcript)
14
(No Transcript)
15
(No Transcript)
16
RSS Multi Object Spectroscopy
  • 3 masks per cluster
  • 20-30 galaxies per mask
  • 2 exposures per mask
  • 1000s exposures

17
SALT Spectra
  • Once spectra is reduced it is correlated with
    galaxy templates.
  • 7 different galaxy templates from SDSS
  • Of the spectra acquired, only those with multiple
    line (HK) confirmations were selected for
    velocity dispersion and mass estimates

Blue line is spectra, green line is template
18
Membership criteria (include slide?)
  • Ranked 3 or 4 in spectra quality
  • Utilize shifty-gapper technique to remove
    non-member galaxies
  • Remove galaxies outside R200

19
Cluster J0320 Mask 2 Galaxy Members
Preliminary results show
20
YM Relation Results
  • SALT observations will help us to characterize
    the scaling relation between SZ signal and
    cluster mass as well as improving our
    understanding of this relation's redshift
    evolution
  • SALT observations are ongoing through 2013.

Y200 dynamical mass relation derived from 2010B
Gemini/VLT observations of southern ACT clusters
(solid line, Sifon et al., 2012). The slope of
the relation is consistent with the self-similar
prediction more observations are needed to
improve this result and constrain the evolution
with redshift of the relation. Note the Battaglia
et al. result is from numerical simulations, and
the Planck result is from stacking clusters at
much lower redshifts than the ACT sample.
21
In Summary
  • cluster counts as a function of redshift
    constrain cosmology
  • need to measure cluster masses accurately
  • using SALT to collect spectra of galaxy
    clusters detected by ACT
  • measuring mass of clusters using velocity
    dispersions to help calibrate YM relation
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com