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Current and Future SZ Surveys

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Title: Current and Future SZ Surveys


1
Current and Future SZ Surveys
  • Sunil Golwala
  • California Institute of Technology
  • July 7, 2001

2
Overview
  • The Sunyaev-Zeldovich effect in galaxy clusters
  • Science with blind SZE surveys
  • Interferometers and bolometer arrays
  • Calculating expected sensitivities
  • Laundry list of current and future instruments
    specifications and sensitivities
  • Summary for the near future
  • Thanks to all the instrument teams for specs and
    numbers!

3
The Sunyaev-Zeldovich Effect in Galaxy Clusters
  • Thermal SZE is the Compton up-scattering of CMB
    photons by electrons in hot, intracluster plasma

CMB photons T (1 z) 2.725K
?TCMB/TCMB depends only on cluster y
line-of-sight integral of neTe. Both ?TCMB and
TCMB are redshifted similarly ? ratio unchanged
as photons propagate and independent of cluster
distance
galaxy cluster with hot ICM z 0 - 3
scattered photons (hotter)
observer z 0
last scatteringsurface z 1100
thermal SZE causes nonthermal change in spectrum.
CMB looks colder to left of peak, hotter to
right
Sunyaev Zeldovich (1980)
4
Current SZE Data
SZE only, 15 - 40 µK/beam rms
  • Beautiful images of the SZE inclusters at a
    large range ofredshifts from Carlstrom
    groupusing 1 cm (30 GHz) receiversat BIMA and
    OVRO
  • But sensitivity of this and other instruments too
    poor for blind surveys

Carlstrom et al, Phys. Scr., T 148 (2000)
CL001616, SZE X-ray (ROSAT PSPC)
5
The Sunyaev-Zeldovich Effect in Galaxy Clusters
  • Proportional to line integralof electron
    pressure
  • Fractional effect is independent of cluster
    redshift
  • Thermal SZE causes unique spectral distortion of
    CMB
  • hole in the sky to left of peak
  • Simplifies in Rayleigh-Jeans limit
  • But same spectrum as CMB in this limit

6
Secondary CMB Anisotropy
  • The thermal SZE is the dominant contributor to
    CMB secondary anisotropy (beyond the damping
    tail) thermal SZE from LSS at low z
  • Probes baryon pressure distribution, early energy
    injection
  • Spectrally separable from primary anisotropy
  • Other effects (kinematic/Ostriker-Vishniac,
    patchy reionization) at much lower level, same
    spectrum as primary

Predictions for secondary anisotropy Springel et
al, Ap. J.,549 681 (2000) Seljak et al, PRD, 63
063001 (2001) Limits (95CL) ATCA Subrahmanyan
et al, MNRAS, 315 808 (2000). BIMA Dawson et
al, Ap. J., 553 L1 (2001) Ryle Jones et al,
Proc. PPEU (1997).
ATCA
Ryle
BIMA
Springel
Seljak
7
Unbiased Cluster Detection via the SZE
  • Central decrement is bad observable because of
    dependence on core characteristics
  • Integrated SZE over cluster face more robust and
    provides largely z-independent mass limit
    (Barbosa et al (1996), Holder et al (2000), etc.)
  • M200 is virial mass (inside R200), equal to
    volume integral of ne/fICM
  • ?Te?n is electron-density weighted electron
    temperature
  • Under fair sample assumption, fICM given by BBN
    value
  • dA2 factor arises from integration
  • weak z-dependence arises from fortuitous
    cancellation
  • dA2 factor tends to reduce flux as z increases
    (1/r2 law)
  • But for a given mass, a cluster at high redshift
    has smaller R200 and hence higher ?Te?nM200 ?
    (R200)3, ? increases with z, so R200 must
    decrease to get same M200, and T M200/R200

8
Unbiased Cluster Detection via the SZE
  • Holder, Mohr, et al (2000) modeled the mass limit
    of an interferometric SZE survey (synth. beam
    3) using simulations
  • Bears out expectation of weak dependence of mass
    limit on zSZE provides an essentially
    z-independent selection function it allows
    detection of all clusters above a given mass
    limit
  • v. different selection function from
    optical/x-ray surveys
  • For any survey, careful modelling will be
    required to determine this precisely, understand
    uncertainties

limiting mass vs. z for an interferometric
survey for different cosmologies
Holder et al, Ap. J., 544629 (2000)
9
Science with Blind SZE Surveys
  • Galaxy clusters
  • largest virialized objects
  • so large that formation not severely affected by
    messy astrophysics star formation, gas
    dynamics
  • mass, temperature, radius understood within
    simple spherical tophat collapse model
  • ? good probe of cosmological quantities
  • power spectrum amplitude (?8)
  • total matter density (?m)
  • volume element (?tot)
  • growth function (?m, ??)
  • with higher statistics, equation of state p w?,
    dependence of w on z
  • (see talks by Holder, Kamionkowski)
  • Non-Gaussianity clusters are high-significance
    excursions, sensitive to non-Gaussian tails

10
Science with Blind SZE Surveys
  • Constraining cosmological parameters
  • Best done with redshift distribution
  • Separation at high redshift between OCDM and ?CDM
    due to different growth functions, volume element
    (more high-z volume in open universe)
  • Normalization of redshift distribution v.
    sensitive to ?8 ( power spectrum normalization)

Reichardt, Benson, and Kamionkowski, in
preparation
11
Science with Blind SZE Surveys
  • Looking for non-Gaussianity
  • assume a cosmology
  • non-Gaussianity changes z-distribution if tail
    is longer, get more clusters at high z

Reichardt, Benson, andKamionkowski, in
preparation
12
SZE Instrument Parameter Space
  • Where is it possible to do high-l measurements
    (from the ground)?
  • Rayleigh-Jeans tail (10s of GHz)
  • atmosphere not a big problem
  • HEMT receivers provide good sensitivity
  • have to contend with radio pt srces,but
    subtraction demonstrated(DASI, CBI, BIMA, ATCA)
  • near the peak (100-300 GHz)
  • least point source contamination
  • have to contend with sky noise
  • bolometric instruments provide best
    sensitivities in this band
  • shorter wavelengths
  • sky noise horrendous
  • IR point sources difficult (impossible?) to
    observe and subtract

13
Techniques
  • Interferometers
  • pros
  • many systematics and noises do not correlate
    (rcvr gains, sky emission)
  • phase switching and the celestial fringe rate can
    be used to reject offsets, 1/f noise,
    non-celestial signals (if not comounted)
  • individual dish pointing requirements not as
    stringent as for single dish (if not comounted)
  • HEMT rcvrs, no sub-K cryogenics
  • cons
  • not natural choice for brightness sensitivity
    must make array look like single dish to achieve
  • operating frequency, BW limited by rcvr
    technology, correlator cost
  • Bolometers
  • pros
  • sensitivity, bandwidth
  • simplicity of readout chain
  • scalability (big FOV arrays)
  • cons
  • sub-K cryogenics
  • standard single-dish problems spillover, sky
    noise, etc.
  • requires chopping or az scan to push signal out
    of 1/f noise

14
Instantaneous Bolometer Sensitivity
  • Noise sources specified as noise-equivalent
    power (NEP), power incident on detector that can
    be detected at 1? in 1 sec, units of Wvsec
  • detector noise Johnson noise of thermistor,
    phonon noise, amplifier noise, etc.
  • BLIP noise shot noise on DC optical load
    present even if sky is perfectly quiet
  • sky noise variations in sky loading
  • These yield noise-equivalent flux density
    (NEFD)flux density (Jy) that can be detected at
    1? in 1 sec units of Jyvsec
  • Beam size gives noise-equivalent surface
    brightness (NESB) units of (Jy/arcmin2)vsec
  • Can then calculate noise-equivalent temperature
    (NETCMB), units of (µKCMB/beam)vsec
  • and finally, noise-equivalent y parameter (NEy),
    units of (1/beam)vsec

15
Instantaneous Interferometer Sensitivity
  • Single-antenna noise sources summed to give Tsys
  • Trcvr (receiver noise) bolometer detector
    noise, like a NEP
  • Tsky (optical loading) due to DC optical load,
    but, unlike bolometers, this NEP scales with
    Tsky, not as vTsky ? vPsky because coherent
    receiver
  • sky noise nonexistent unless imaging the
    atmosphere
  • Tsys and number of baselines n yield NEFD
  • As for bolometers, calculate NET (µK/beam)vsec
    from NEFD
  • must assume well-filled aperture (uv) plane so it
    is valid to use simple ?beamshould include
    correction for central hole in uv plane, ignore
    for this
  • In RJ limit, simplifies greatly
  • And using antenna theorem
  • finally, NEy, units of (1/beam)vsec

16
Mapping Speed
  • Straightforward to calculate a mapping speed for
    a bolometer array
  • Also pretty trivial for an interferometerand
    in RJ limitcounterintuitive? Increased FOV
    hurts unless beam size also increased fixed
    sensitivity spread over larger sky area
  • Comparing mapping speeds must be careful about
    beam size. Affects NET and FOV, though in
    different ways for bolometers and
    interferometers.
  • Point source mapping speed? Only appropriate for
    large-beam experiments, hard to compare bec. SZ
    flux strong function of frequency.

17
New SZE Survey Instruments
  • Now ACBAR, BOLOCAM
  • Soon (2003/2004) SZA, AMI, AMiBA
  • Not so soon (gt2004?) ACT, SP Bolo Array
    Telescope, etc.
  • Numbers
  • all numbers calculated with true CMB spectrum
    i.e., not in RJ limit
  • For thermal SZ, best to compare y/beam
    sensitivity, since this can be compared at
    different frequencies. Could also use Y area
    integral of y.NEY is like NEFD, except corrected
    for SZ spectrum.
  • Using y assumes a beam-filling source, using Y
    assumes an unresolved source.
  • y favors large-beam experiments, Y favors
    small-beam experiments, both impressions are
    artificial
  • Mass limits are those provided by each
    experiment, or in the literature. They are not
    consistent with each other! Further comment
    later.

18
ACBAR Instrument Specs
  • Arcminute Cosmology Bolometer Array Receiver
  • UCB, UCSB, Caltech/JPL, CMU
  • 2m VIPER dish at South Pole
  • spider-web bolometers at 240 mK
  • 4 horns each at 150, 220, 270, 350 GHz
  • 4.5 beams at 150 GHz
  • BW 25 GHz
  • Ndet ?beam 64 arcmin2
  • chopping tertiary, 3 deg chop, raster scan in
    dec
  • Unique multifrequency coverage promises
    separation of thermal SZE and primary CMB

274 219 150 345 GHz
Corrugated feeds
4K filters lenses
Thermal gap
250mK filt lens
Bolometers
19
ACBAR Sensitivity
  • Achieved (2001), dominated by 4x150
  • NET 440 µKCMBvsec (per row)
  • NEy 150 x 10-6 vsec (per row)
  • MT 34 deg2 (10 µK/beam)-2 month-1
  • My 2.8 deg2 (10-6/beam)-2 month-1
  • MY 0.55 deg2 (10-5 arcmin2)-2 month-1
  • Map 10 deg2 in 200 hrs (live) to
  • Trms 10 µK/beam
  • yrms 4 x 10-6/beam
  • Yrms 8 x 10-5 arcmin2
  • 2002 4x150 12x280 focal plane
  • NEy 95 x 10-6 vsec (per row)
  • My 7.2 (10-6/beam)-2 month-1
  • MY 1.4 (10-5 arcmin2)-2 month-1
  • significant improvement in NEy from
    better-matched multifrequency coverage
  • Possibly 2X better sensitivity if optical
    loading problem fixed
  • Mapping speeds benefit from large beams, though
    also gives high mass limit (few x 1014 Msun)

20
BOLOCAM Instrument Specs
  • Caltech/JPL, Colorado, Cardiff
  • 10.4m CSO on Mauna Kea
  • Spider-web bolometer array at 300 mK
  • 144 horns at 150, 220, 270 GHz (not
    simultaneous)
  • 1 beams at 150 GHz
  • BW 20 GHz
  • Ndet ?beam 160 arcmin2
  • drift scan raster in dec, possible az. scan,
    raster in ZA
  • Large number of pixels at high resolution
    unique for SZ
  • Multifrequency coverage, but at poorer
    sensitivity in otherbands and delayed in time

21
BOLOCAM Sensitivity
  • Expected, based on extrapolation fromSuZIE 1.5
  • NET 1300 µKCMBvsec
  • NEy 470 x 10-6 vsec
  • MT 6.8 deg2 (10 µK/beam)-2 month-1
  • My 0.53 (10-6/beam)-2 month-1
  • MY 42 (10-5 arcmin2)-2 month-1
  • Map 1 deg2 in 100 hrs (live)
  • Trms 10-15 µK/beam
  • yrms 4 x 10-6/beam
  • Yrms 0.4 x 10-5 arcmin2
  • Expectations consistent with achievedsensitivity
    in engineering run at 220 GHz
  • Mapping speed degraded by small beams but small
    beams yield low mass limit ( 2-3 x 1014 Msun)

22
SZ Array Instrument Specs
  • SZ Array
  • Chicago (Carlstrom), MSFC (Joy), et al
  • 8 x 3.5m at 30 GHz
  • NRAO HEMT receivers, 10K noise, 21K system
    noise
  • 8 GHz digital correlator (in conjunction with
    OVRO)
  • FOVFWHM 10.5, BeamFWHM 2.25? (unable to get
    definite number for beam, so scale from AMI)
  • 1-year survey of 12 deg2, part of time in
    heterogeneous mode
  • later upgrade to 90 GHz

23
SZ Array Sensitivity
  • Sensitivity and mapping speed for 8x3.5m array
    assuming 2.25 beam
  • NET 730 (mKCMB/beam)vs
  • NEy 140 (10-6/beam)vs
  • MT 17 deg2 (10 µK/beam)-2 month-1
  • My 4.7 (10-6/beam)-2 month-1
  • MY 15 (10-5 arcmin2)-2 month-1
  • Map 12 deg2 in 1 yr at 75 eff.
  • Trms 2.8 µK/beam
  • yrms 0.5 x 10-6/beam
  • Yrms 0.3 x 10-5 arcmin2
  • HETEROGENEOUS BASELINES HAVE NOT BEEN INCLUDED
    HERE!They improve sensitivity to low masses
    (counteract beam dilution)
  • Mass limit 1014 Msun, found by Monte Carlo in
    visibility space
  • pt. src. subtraction wont need continuous
    monitoring, intermittent monitoring sufficient

SZA OVRO
24
AMI Instrument Specs
  • Arcminute Microkelvin Imager
  • MRAO/Cavendish/Cambridge group
  • 10 x 3.7m at 15 GHz
  • NRAO HEMT receivers,13K noise, 25K system
    noise
  • 6 GHz analog correlator
  • FOVFWHM 21, BeamFWHM 4.5
  • concurrent point source monitoring by Ryle
    Telescope (8 x 13m), no heterogeneous
    correlation
  • Expect to upgrade receivers to InP HEMTs, 6K
    rcvr noise, 18K system noise

25
AMI Expected Sensitivity
clusters detectable in simulated
observationsnote how redsfhit range increases
as Y is lowered
  • Sensitivity and mapping speed
  • NET 470 (mKCMB/beam)vs
  • NEy 90 (10-6/beam)vs
  • MT 160 deg2 (10 µK/beam)-2 month-1
  • My 47 deg2 (10-6/beam)-2 month-1
  • MY 9.2 (10-5 arcmin2)-2 month-1
  • Map 36 deg2 in 6 months at 75 eff.
  • Trms 2 µK/beam
  • yrms 4 x 10-6/beam
  • Yrms 1 x 10-5 arcmin2
  • Map 2 deg2 in 6 months at 75 eff.
  • Trms 0.5 µK/beam
  • yrms 0.1 x 10-6/beam
  • Yrms 0.2 x 10-5 arcmin2
  • Mass limit 1014 Msun in deep survey
  • As with ACBAR, mapping speed greatly helped by
    large beam, but also yields high mass limit (or
    long integration time and small area coverage for
    low mass limit)

26
AMiBA Instrument Specs
  • Array for Microwave Background Anisotropy
  • ASIAA ATNF CMU
  • 19 x 1.2m at 90 GHz
  • MMIC HEMT receivers under development in Taiwan,
    45K noise expected, 75K system noise
  • 20 GHz analog correlator
  • FOVFWHM 11, BeamFWHM 2.6
  • Also 19 x 0.3m for CMB polarization

27
AMiBA Expected Sensitivity
  • Sensitivity and mapping speed
  • NET 590 (µKCMB/beam)vs
  • NET 140 (10-6/beam)vs
  • MT 28 deg2 (10 µK/beam)-2 month-1
  • My 5 deg2 (10-6/beam)-2 month-1
  • MY 8.9 (10-5 arcmin2)-2 month-1
  • 3 different surveys (eff. 50)
  • deep 3 deg2 in 6 months to Trms 0.2 µK/beam,
    yrms 0.4 x 10-6/beam,Yrms 0.3 x 10-5 arcmin2
  • med. 70 deg2 in 12 months to Trms 0.6 µK/beam,
    yrms 1.5 x 10-6/beam,Yrms 1.1 x 10-5 arcmin2
  • wide 175 deg2 in 6 months to Trms 1.4 µK/beam,
    yrms 3.4 x 10-6/beam,Yrms 2.6 x 10-5 arcmin2
  • Mass limits 2, 4.5, 6.5 x 1014 Msun
  • pt. src. confusion much less at 90 GHz will do
    survey to check src. counts, but expect confusion
    from low-flux clusters will be more important

28
ACT Instrument Specs
  • Atacama Cosmology Telescope
  • Princeton/Penn (Page, Devlin, Staggs)
  • 6m off-axis dish with ground screen, near ALMA
    site
  • 3 x 32x32 arrays of TES-based pop-up bolometers
    with multiplexed SQUID readout
  • 150, 220, 265 GHz bands
  • 1.7, 1.1, 0.9 beam sizes
  • 22 x 22 FOV
  • azimuth scan of entire telescope
  • l-space coverage from l 200 to 104
  • Expected NETs300, 500, 700 µKCMBvsdetector/BLIP
    limitedTsky 20K assumedsky noise expected to
    be negligible at l gt 1000 in Chile

29
ACT Sensitivity
  • Sensitivity and mapping speed
  • NET 300 (µKCMB/beam)vs
  • NEy 115 (10-6/beam)vs
  • MT 2600 deg2 (10 µK/beam)-2 month-1
  • My 180 deg2 (10-6/beam)-2 month-1
  • MY 1700 (10-5 arcmin2)-2 month-1
  • Huge mapping speed because of good sensitivity
    and large FOV 100 deg2 in 4 months at eff.
    25 to
  • Trms 2 µK/beam
  • yrms 0.7 x 10-6/beam
  • Yrms 0.2 x 10-5 arcmin2
  • Will actually do significantly better because of
    multi-frequency coverage (not accounted for in
    above)
  • Expected mass limit 4 x 1014 Msun (seems overly
    conservative!)
  • Multi-frequency coverage promises excellent
    separation of thermal SZE and CMB-like secondary
    effects
  • Proposed, not yet funded

30
South Pole Bolometer Array Telescope
  • Chicago (Carlstrom et al, Meyer), UCB
    (Holzapfel, Lee), UCSB (Ruhl), CfA (Stark),
    UIUC (Mohr)
  • 32x32 bolometer array,90 at 150 GHz,10 at
    220 GHz
  • 1.3 beam at 150 GHz
  • FOV telescope 1 degarray 17 x 17?

31
South Pole Bolometer Array Telescope
  • Sensitivity and mapping speed
  • NET 250 (µKCMB/beam)vs
  • NEy 90 (10-6/beam)vs
  • MT 2000 deg2 (10 µK/beam)-2 month-1
  • My 160 deg2 (10-6/beam)-2 month-1
  • MY 4700 (10-5 arcmin2)-2 month-1
  • 4000 deg2 in 2 months live to
  • Trms 10 µK/beam
  • yrms 3.5 x 10-6/beam
  • Yrms 0.7 x 10-5 arcmin2
  • multi-frequency coveragenot so good, so has
    little effect
  • Expected mass limit 3.5 x 1014 Msun
  • Proposal into NSF-OPP

32
Summary and Scalings
  • Plot of mapping speeds vs. beam FWHM for y and Y
    area integral of y
  • Overresolution can correct for this by coadding
    adjacent pixels. Corrects y and Y mapping speeds
    by ?src2 and ?src-2, respectively. Note ratio
    of mapping speeds for two experiments scaled to
    same ?src is independent of whether y or Y is
    used.
  • Beam dilution for y mapping speed, beam-filling
    source is assumed. If not, apparent y in beam is
    degraded by (?beam/?src)2, mapping speed by
    (?src/?beam)4

(?src/?beam)2
(?src/?beam)-2
x-axis is ? src for scaling lines, ? beam for
experiments
(?src/?beam)4
33
Random Parting Thoughts
  • Calculation of mass limits seems still to be
    highly scientist-dependent
  • Would be nice to have agreed-upon estimation
    method
  • Of course, some disagreement is inevetible and
    indicative of our ignorance
  • Expecting µK/beam maps with v. small pixels over
    large areas
  • What kind of instrumental junk is going to turn
    up?
  • Do we really not expect to run into diffuse
    backgrounds?
  • When does point-source subtraction begin to fail?
  • When do mm-wave instruments become point-source
    confused?
  • Interferometers vs. Bolometers
  • Will interferometers ever be competitive near the
    null?
  • What about interferometers with multi-pixel
    receivers to increase FOV?
  • Large telescopes with bolometer arrays getting
    too large for small groups (manpower ).
    Heading out of the small experiment regime. You
    dont get a new measurement technique for free!

34
Conclusion
  • First blind cluster surveys using SZE underway or
    beginning soon
  • New instrumentson the horizon with remarkable raw
    sensitivities and mapping speeds
  • Exciting new science coming in the next few years
  • New, independent measures of ?8, ?m, ??
  • Prospect for new measure of equation of state
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