Back to Search Start Over

The BAHAMAS project: the CMB--large-scale structure tension and the roles of massive neutrinos and galaxy formation

Authors :
McCarthy, Ian G.
Bird, Simeon
Schaye, Joop
Harnois-Deraps, Joachim
Font, Andreea S.
van Waerbeke, Ludovic
Publication Year :
2017

Abstract

Recent studies have presented evidence for tension between the constraints on Omega_m and sigma_8 from the cosmic microwave background (CMB) and measurements of large-scale structure (LSS). This tension can potentially be resolved by appealing to extensions of the standard model of cosmology and/or untreated systematic errors in the modelling of LSS, of which baryonic physics has been frequently suggested. We revisit this tension using, for the first time, carefully-calibrated cosmological hydrodynamical simulations, which thus capture the back reaction of the baryons on the total matter distribution. We have extended the BAHAMAS simulations to include a treatment of massive neutrinos, which currently represents the best motivated extension to the standard model. We make synthetic thermal Sunyaev-Zel'dovich effect, weak galaxy lensing, and CMB lensing maps and compare to observed auto- and cross-power spectra from a wide range of recent observational surveys. We conclude that: i) in general there is tension between the primary CMB and LSS when adopting the standard model with minimal neutrino mass; ii) after calibrating feedback processes to match the gas fractions of clusters, the remaining uncertainties in the baryonic physics modelling are insufficient to reconcile this tension; and iii) if one accounts for internal tensions in the Planck CMB dataset (by allowing the lensing amplitude, A_Lens, to vary), invoking a non-minimal neutrino mass, typically of 0.2-0.4 eV, can resolve the tension. This solution is fully consistent with separate constraints from the primary CMB and baryon acoustic oscillations.<br />Comment: To match the accepted MNRAS version. BAHAMAS maps available at http://www.astro.ljmu.ac.uk/~igm/BAHAMAS/

Details

Database :
arXiv
Publication Type :
Report
Accession number :
edsarx.1712.02411
Document Type :
Working Paper
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1093/mnras/sty377