Signatures of Suppressed Matter Clustering revealed by Fast Radio Bursts
Abstract
Complex astrophysical processes regulate the growth of galaxies by injecting energy and momentum into their surroundings, redistributing baryons across megaparsec scales. The clustering of matter on these scales, as measured via weak lensing and galaxy surveys, encodes critical cosmological information on the dynamical dark energy, the nature of dark matter and the sum of neutrino masses. The suppression of matter clustering due to feedback processes limits the interpretation of cosmological measurements. Multiple probes of the baryon distribution have attempted to quantify the strength of feedback via measurements of suppression in the matter power spectrum. The dispersion measures (DMs) of fast radio bursts (FRBs) have emerged as a powerful new probe of baryons, with the advantage over other probes of being unbiased with respect to density and temperature. Here, we use a sample of 109 FRBs with redshifts and DMs to directly measure the spatial fluctuations in the baryon density field, quantifying the effects of feedback on the matter power spectrum at scales of k 0.1-3 h/Mpc, and the gas fraction in galaxy groups and clusters (1013-1015 M). We use a halo-model prescription to conduct inference, and find that FRB data reduces the posterior variance at k 1 h/Mpc by a factor of 8 relative to the prior. The statistical precision of inferred FRB constraints is similar to other baryon tracers, while probing a complementary redshift regime (z 0.3). A comparison with several hydrodynamical simulations excludes extreme large-scale feedback scenarios at 2σ confidence. This work establishes FRBs as a sensitive probe of feedback-regulated structure formation. As next-generation experiments deliver orders-of-magnitude larger samples, FRBs are poised to drive the constraints on baryonic physics in the era of precision cosmology.
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