ArXiv TLDR

Backlighting the Cosmic Web with Fast Radio Bursts: An Anthology of Dispersion Measure Cross-Correlations with Large-Scale Structure and Baryon Tracers

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2604.22105

Kritti Sharma, Elisabeth Krause, Vikram Ravi, Dhayaa Anbajagane, Liam Connor + 9 more

astro-ph.COastro-ph.GAastro-ph.HE

TLDR

FRBs are used to map cosmic web baryons by correlating their dispersion measures with ten large-scale structure tracers, revealing systematically higher DMs in overdense regions.

Key contributions

  • Correlated 3,455 FRB dispersion measures with ten large-scale structure and baryonic matter tracers at z < 1.5.
  • Found statistically significant correlations (2.6-5σ) between FRB DMs and various cosmic web components.
  • Demonstrated that FRB sightlines through overdense environments consistently show larger dispersion measures.
  • Constrained baryon distribution models, ruling out weaker feedback scenarios with SXRB×DM correlations.

Why it matters

This study provides a robust multi-tracer framework for using FRBs to map the cosmic web's baryon content. It offers crucial insights into the distribution of matter and the strength of astrophysical feedback processes. These findings pave the way for next-generation FRB facilities to precisely chart the universe's missing baryons.

Original Abstract

Fast Radio Bursts (FRBs) probe baryons permeating the cosmic web through their dispersion measures (DMs), which encode the integrated electron density along cosmological sightlines. Using 3,455 unique FRB sources from CHIME/FRB with $\sim 15$ arcmin localizations, we present an anthology of DM correlations with tracers of large-scale structure and baryonic matter at redshifts $z \lesssim 1.5$. We measure statistically significant correlations at $2.6-5σ$ with ten probes, including galaxies ($2.8σ$), weak gravitational lensing ($2.6σ$), cosmic infrared background ($4.0σ$), cosmic microwave background (CMB) lensing ($3.3σ$), thermal Sunyaev Zel'dovich (tSZ) effect ($3.8σ$), X-ray emission tracing galaxy clusters ($5.0σ$) and superclusters ($3.3σ$), soft X-ray background (SXRB, $4.1σ$), and radio continuum emission ($3.2σ$). These measurements reveal a consistent picture in which FRB sightlines intersecting overdense environments carry systematically larger DMs. Correlations with hot-gas tracers provide additional leverage on the strength of feedback, as they are strongly weighted towards the dense, bound gas. The measured amplitude of tSZ$\times$DM and SXRB$\times$DM correlations are consistent with theoretical predictions of baryon distribution from a DM-$z$ relation-inferred model with moderate feedback at $\sim 0.5σ$ level. Weaker feedback scenario is ruled out at $\sim 3.5σ$ by the SXRB$\times$DM correlation. Taken together, these measurements constitute a quantitative multi-tracer foundation for a new era in which FRBs from next generation facilities, such as BURSTT, CHORD, DSA, and SKA, in harmony with other probes, will map the baryon content of the full extent of the cosmic web.

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