A Measurement of Large-Scale Peculiar Velocities of Clusters of Galaxies: Results and Cosmological Implications
A. Kashlinsky1, F. Atrio-Barandela2, D. Kocevski3, and H. Ebeling4
Published 23 September 2008 •
© 2008. The American Astronomical Society. All rights reserved. Printed in U.S.A.
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Citation A. Kashlinsky et al 2008 ApJ 686 L49
1538-4357/686/2/L49
Peculiar velocities of clusters of galaxies can be measured by studying the fluctuations in the cosmic microwave background (CMB) generated by the scattering of the microwave photons by the hot X-ray-emitting gas inside clusters. While for individual clusters such measurements result in large errors, a large statistical sample of clusters allows one to study cumulative quantities dominated by the overall bulk flow of the sample with the statistical errors integrating down. We present results from such a measurement using the largest all-sky X-ray cluster catalog combined to date and the 3 yr WMAP CMB data. We find a strong and coherent bulk flow on scales out to at least
300 h−1 Mpc, the limit of our catalog. This flow is difficult to explain by gravitational evolution within the framework of the concordance ΛCDM model and may be indicative of the tilt exerted across the entire current horizon by far-away pre-inflationary inhomogeneities.