Planck-dust-allsky

First detection of the Sunyaev Zel'dovich effect increment at λ < 650 μm

July 2010 • 2010A&A...518L..16Z

Authors • Zemcov, M. • Rex, M. • Rawle, T. D. • Bock, J. J. • Egami, E. • Altieri, B. • Blain, A. W. • Boone, F. • Bridge, C. R. • Clement, B. • Combes, F. • Dowell, C. D. • Dessauges-Zavadsky, M. • Fadda, D. • Ilbert, O. • Ivison, R. J. • Jauzac, M. • Kneib, J. -P. • Lutz, D. • Pelló, R. • Pereira, M. J. • Pérez-González, P. G. • Richard, J. • Rieke, G. H. • Rodighiero, G. • Schaerer, D. • Smith, G. P. • Valtchanov, I. • Walth, G. L. • van der Werf, P. • Werner, M. W.

Abstract • The Sunyaev-Zel'dovich (SZ) effect is a spectral distortion of the cosmic microwave background as observed through the hot plasma in galaxy clusters. This distortion is a decrement in the CMB intensity for λ > 1.3 mm, an increment at shorter wavelengths, and small again by λ ~ 250 μm. As part of the Herschel Lensing Survey (HLS) we have mapped 1E0657-56 (the Bullet cluster) with SPIRE with bands centered at 250, 350 and 500 μm and have detected the SZ effect at the two longest wavelengths. The measured SZ effect increment central intensities are ΔI0 = 0.097 ± 0.019 MJy sr-1 at 350 μm and ΔI0 = 0.268 ± 0.031 MJy sr-1 at 500 μm, consistent with the SZ effect spectrum derived from previous measurements at 2 mm. No other diffuse emission is detected. The presence of the finite temperature SZ effect correction is preferred by the SPIRE data at a significance of 2.1σ, opening the possibility that the relativistic SZ effect correction can be constrained by SPIRE in a sample of clusters. The results presented here have important ramifications for both sub-mm measurements of galaxy clusters and blank field surveys with SPIRE.

Herschel is an ESA space observatory with science instruments provided by European-led Principal Investigator consortia and with important participation from NASA. It is open for proposals for observing time from the worldwide astronomical community. Data presented in this paper were analyzed using “The Herschel interactive processing environment (HIPE)”, a joint development by the Herschel Science Ground Segment Consortium, consisting of ESA, the NASA Herschel Science Center, and the HIFI, PACS and SPIRE consortia.

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