Tomographic measurement of the intergalactic gas pressure through galaxy-tSZ cross-correlations
Abstract
We cross-correlate maps of the thermal Sunyaev-Zeldovich (tSZ) Compton-y parameter published by Planck with the projected distribution of galaxies in a set of low-redshift tomographic bins. We use the nearly full-sky 2MASS Photometric Redshift and WISE × SuperCOSMOS public catalogues, covering the redshift range z0.4. Our measurements allow us to place constraints on the redshift dependence of the mass-observable relation for tSZ cluster count analyses in terms of the so-called 'hydrostatic mass bias' parameter 1-b H. These results can also be interpreted as measurements of the bias-weighted average gas pressure bPe as a function of redshift, a quantity that can be related to the thermodynamics of gas inside haloes and used to constrain energy injection processes. We measure 1-b H with 6\% precision in 6 equispaced redshift bins, and find no evidence for a redshift-dependent mass bias parameter, in agreement with previous analyses. Our mean value of 1-b H = 0.750.03 is also in good agreement with the one estimated by the joint analysis of Planck cluster counts and CMB anisotropies calibrated with CMB lensing. Our measurements of bPe, at the level of 10\% in each bin, are the most stringent constraints on the redshift dependence of this parameter to date, and agree well both with previous measurements and with theoretical expectations from shock-heating models.
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