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Peculiar Velocities of Galaxy Clusters
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Peculiar Velocities of Galaxy Clusters

Abstract

We investigate the peculiar velocities predicted for galaxy clusters by theories in the cold dark matter family. A widely used hypothesis identifies rich clusters with high peaks of a suitably smoothed version of the linear density fluctuation field. Their peculiar velocities are then obtained by extrapolating the similarly smoothed linear peculiar velocities at the positions of these peaks. We test these ideas using large high resolution N-body simulations carried out within the Virgo supercomputing consortium. We find that at early times the barycentre of the material which ends up in a rich cluster is generally very close to a high peak of the initial density field. Furthermore the mean peculiar velocity of this material agrees well with the linear value at the peak. The late-time growth of peculiar velocities is, however, systematically underestimated by linear theory. At the time clusters are identified we find their rms peculiar velocity to be about 40% larger than predicted. Nonlinear effects are particularly important in superclusters. These systematics must be borne in mind when using cluster peculiar velocities to estimate the parameter combination $\sigma_8\Omega^{0.6}$.

Authors

Colberg JM; White SDM; MacFarland TJ; Jenkins A; Pearce FR; Frenk CS; Thomas PA; Couchman HMP

Publication date

May 6, 1998

DOI

10.48550/arxiv.astro-ph/9805078

Preprint server

arXiv
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