The Amplitude of Mass Fluctuations

Abstract

We determine the linear amplitude of mass fluctuations in the universe, sigma8, from the abundance of massive clusters at redshifts z=0.5 to 0.8. The evolution of massive clusters depends exponentially on the amplitude of mass fluctuations and thus provides a powerful measure of this important cosmological parameter. The relatively high abundance of massive clusters observed at z>0.5, and the relatively slow evolution of their abundance with time, suggest a high amplitude of mass fluctuations: sigma8=0.9 +-10% for Omegam=0.4, increasing slightly to sigma8=0.95 for Omegam=0.25 and sigma8=1.0 for Omegam=0.1 (flat CDM models). We use the cluster abundance observed at z=0.5 to 0.8 to derive a normalization relation from the high-redshift clusters, which is only weakly dependent on Omegam: sigma8*Omegam0.14 = 0.78 +-0.08. When combined with recent constraints from the present-day cluster mass function (sigma8*Omegam0.6=0.33 +-0.03) we find sigma8=0.98 +-0.1 and Omegam=0.17 +-0.05. Low sigma8 values (<0.7) are unlikely; they produce an order of magnitude fewer massive clusters than observed.

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