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A&A 367, 1-17 (2001)
DOI: 10.1051/0004-6361:20000403
Secondary CMB anisotropies from the kinetic SZ effect
P. Valageas1, A. Balbi2 and J. Silk3, 41 Service de Physique Théorique, CEA Saclay, 91191 Gif-sur-Yvette, France
2 Dipartimento di Fisica, Università Tor Vergata, 00133 Roma, Italy
3 Astrophysics, Department of Physics, Keble Road, Oxford OX1 3RH, UK
4 Institut d'Astrophysique de Paris, CNRS, 98bis boulevard Arago, 75014 Paris, France
(Received 28 July 2000 / Accepted 29 November 2000)
Abstract
The reionization of the universe by stars and quasars is expected to be
a highly
inhomogeneous process. Moreover, the fluctuations of the matter density
field
also lead to inhomogeneities of the free electron distribution. These
patterns
gave rise to secondary CMB anisotropies through Thomson scattering of
photons by
free electrons. In this article we present an analytic model, based on our
previous work which tackled the reionization history of the universe,
which
allows us to describe the generation of these secondary CMB
anisotropies. We
take into account the "patchy pattern"of reionization (HII bubbles),
the
cross-correlations of these ionized regions, the small-scale
fluctuations of the
matter density field and the contribution from collapsed objects.
For an open universe, we find that the angular correlation function
displays a very slow decline from
up to
the scale
rad where it shows a sharp drop. On the other
hand, the
power-spectrum
(and the "local average"Sl)
exhibits a
plateau of height
10-13 in the range
103 < l < 106. We
find that
for large wavenumbers
l > 104 the signal is dominated by the
contribution
from collapsed halos while for
l < 104 it is governed by the
large-scale
correlations of HII bubbles. This implies that one cannot discriminate
reionization by stars from a quasar-driven scenario since the size of
ionized
regions never dominates the behaviour of the anisotropies. Moreover, the
secondary CMB anisotropies arise from a broad range of redshifts (
7.5 <
z < 10
for the IGM and 0< z< 7 for galactic halos). Thus, we find that the
generation
of these anisotropies involves several intricate processes and they are
close to
the resolution limit of current numerical simulations.
The signal expected in our model might bias the cosmological
parameter estimation from CMB experiments such as Planck or MAP, and
could be detected by future mm-wavelength interferometers (e.g., ALMA).
Key words: cosmology: cosmic microwave background -- cosmology: theory -- galaxies: intergalactic medium -- cosmology: large-scale structure of Universe
Offprint request: P. Valageas, valageas@spht.saclay.cea.fr
© ESO 2001
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