Astrophysics with the Spatially and Spectrally Resolved Sunyaev-Zeldovich Effects
Author(s)
Mroczkowski, Tony; Nagai, Daisuke; Basu, Kaustuv; Chluba, Jens; Sayers, Jack; Adam, Rémi; Churazov, Eugene; Crites, Abigail; Di Mascolo, Luca; Eckert, Dominique; Macias-Perez, Juan; Mayet, Frédéric; Perotto, Laurence; Pointecouteau, Etienne; Romero, Charles; ... Show more Show less
Download11214_2019_581_ReferencePDF.pdf (7.867Mb)
Publisher Policy
Publisher Policy
Article is made available in accordance with the publisher's policy and may be subject to US copyright law. Please refer to the publisher's site for terms of use.
Terms of use
Metadata
Show full item recordAbstract
Abstract
In recent years, observations of the Sunyaev-Zeldovich (SZ) effect have had significant cosmological implications and have begun to serve as a powerful and independent probe of the warm and hot gas that pervades the Universe. As a few pioneering studies have already shown, SZ observations both complement X-ray observations—the traditional tool for studying the intra-cluster medium—and bring unique capabilities for probing astrophysical processes at high redshifts and out to the low-density regions in the outskirts of galaxy clusters. Advances in SZ observations have largely been driven by developments in centimetre-, millimetre-, and submillimetre-wave instrumentation on ground-based facilities, with notable exceptions including results from the Planck satellite. Here we review the utility of the thermal, kinematic, relativistic, non-thermal, and polarised SZ effects for studies of galaxy clusters and other large scale structures, incorporating the many advances over the past two decades that have impacted SZ theory, simulations, and observations. We also discuss observational results, techniques, and challenges, and aim to give an overview and perspective on emerging opportunities, with the goal of highlighting some of the exciting new directions in this field.
Date issued
2019-02-12Department
MIT Kavli Institute for Astrophysics and Space ResearchPublisher
Springer Netherlands
Citation
Space Science Reviews. 2019 Feb 12;215(1):17
Version: Author's final manuscript