Format results
Probing baryonic feedback and cosmology with patchy screening in the FLAMINGO Simulations.
Jonah Conley Astrophysics Research Institute - Liverpool John Moores Universtiy
New Physics from the Lyman-Alpha Forest
Vera Gluscevic University of Southern California
Constraining AGN Feedback with Multiwavelength Measurements
Evan Scannapieco Arizona State University
Self-consistent CMB secondaries in the FLAMINGO simulations
Ian McCarthy Astrophysics Research Institute, LJMU
Exascale Class simulations --A leap forward in Cosmological Hydrodynamics
Nick Frontiere Argonne National Laboratory
Cosmological feedback from a halo assembly perspective
Hiranya Peiris University of Cambridge
Flash Talks - 1 min, 1 slide
Presenters: Bhuvan Manojh Calvin Osinga Cassandra Lochhaas Daria Kozlova Dorsa Sadat Hosseini Emily Costello Guandi Zhao Henry Liu Ian Roberts Isaac Cheng Joe Bhangal John Pharo Jonah Conley Junwu Huang Mukesh Singh Bisht Nihar Dalal Noah Sailor Pierre Burger Ray Wang Stephanie Ho Yongming LiangProbing baryonic feedback and cosmology with patchy screening in the FLAMINGO Simulations.
Jonah Conley Astrophysics Research Institute - Liverpool John Moores Universtiy
Understanding the impact of baryonic feedback across different cosmic environments is crucial for accurate interpretation of large-scale structure in Stage-IV cosmological surveys. Hydrodynamical simulations offer a valuable tool for capturing how gas is redistributed by energetic processes, such as AGN feedback, and for predicting how this redistribution alters observable tracers of structure formation. Traditionally, feedback models have been constrained through X-ray and Sunyaev-Zel’dovich measurements of galaxy groups and clusters. However, new observational tracers are emerging that open up alternative windows into the baryonic content of the cosmic web. One such tracer is the patchy screening effect, a subtle CMB anisotropy arising from excess Thomson scattering along the line of sight to groups/clusters due to their higher electron optical depths. This effect is sensitive to the diffuse baryons in the outer regions of the gas profile of the halo, tracing the structure of the cosmic web. It is complementary to the kinetic Sunyaev-Zel’dovich effect, as it probes optical depth without dependence on velocity. In this talk, we present predictions of the patchy screening signal from the FLAMINGO suite of large-volume cosmological hydrodynamical simulations. By generating mock patchy screened CMB maps and cross-correlating them with simulated galaxy populations, we explore how feedback and cosmology shape the optical depth field. Our goal is to assess the sensitivity of this signal to the cosmology and baryonic physics, and to evaluate its potential as a new probe of the gas distribution within the anisotropic structure of the cosmic web.New Physics from the Lyman-Alpha Forest
Vera Gluscevic University of Southern California
Lyman-alpha forest probes matter distribution on scales inaccessible to other observables, presenting a unique and under-explored testing ground for new physics. I will discuss recent advances in using forest observations to constrain particle interactions in the neutrino and dark matter sectors, and highlight promising opportunities for discovery in the coming decade.Constraining AGN Feedback with Multiwavelength Measurements
Evan Scannapieco Arizona State University
Feedback from active galactic nuclei (AGN) plays an essential role in current models of galaxy formation, yet the details of this process remain highly uncertain. I will describe our work combining numerical simulations with microwave, X-ray, and large-scale structure (LSS) survey data to better constrain this process. Our team has conducted a series of simulations spanning a broad range of feedback properties, enabling us to investigate their effects on the circumgalactic medium (CGM). At microwave wavelengths, we use these simulations to predict the thermal and kinetic Sunyaev-Zel’dovich (SZ) effects. We compare these predictions with stacked data from the Atacama Cosmology Telescope (ACT) and the South Pole Telescope (SPT) to derive constraints on AGN feedback. Additionally, we outline plans to improve these constraints with the TolTEC camera on the Large Millimeter Telescope (LMT). At X-ray wavelengths, we apply these simulations to predict soft X-ray emission, which we compare with stacked eROSITA observations. A persistent challenge in interpreting these comparisons is the influence of halo mass. I will discuss how weak gravitational lensing can help resolve this issue, offering new insights into the co-evolution of galaxies and their AGN.X-raying CAMELS: Constraining Feedback Physics in Hot Halo Gas with CAMELS and eRASS
Erwin Lau CfA
The circumgalactic medium (CGM) around massive galaxies plays a crucial role in regulating star formation and feedback. Using the CAMELS cosmological simulation suites, we develop emulators for the X-ray surface brightness profile and the X-ray luminosity–stellar mass scaling relation to investigate how stellar and AGN feedback shape the X-ray properties of the hot CGM. Our analysis shows that stellar feedback more significantly impacts the X-ray properties than AGN feedback within the parameters studied. Comparing the emulators to recent eROSITA All-Sky Survey observations, we found stronger feedback is needed than those currently implemented in the IllustrisTNG, SIMBA, and Astrid simulations, in order to match observed CGM properties. However, adopting these enhanced feedback parameters leads to deviations in the observed stellar-mass-halo-mass relations below the group mass scale. This tension suggests possible unaccounted systematics in X-ray CGM observations or inadequacies in the feedback models of cosmological simulations. Finally, I will also highlight upcoming X-ray constraints of feedback in the group and cluster scales with new CAMELS simulations and compare with those obtained at the CGM scale.Self-consistent CMB secondaries in the FLAMINGO simulations
Ian McCarthy Astrophysics Research Institute, LJMU
Secondary anisotropies in the cosmic microwave background (CMB) contain a wealth of cosmological and astrophysical information. However, cleanly separating the individual contributions of the various kinds of anisotropies from each other can be a very challenging task, owing to uncertainties in their spatial, temporal, and spectral dependencies. Realistic mock simulations of the CMB sky are invaluable for testing our methods of separating out the various signals and for making like-with-like comparisons between theory and observations. Previous mocks have relied mostly on dark matter-only simulations with various prescriptions for "painting on" astrophysical signals. Here we present a new set of mocks based on the FLAMINGO suite of cosmological hydrodynamical simulations, where the various anisotropies (tSZ, kSZ, screening, CIB, lensing, radio sources) are derived directly from the properties of the matter, gas and accreting black holes in the simulations. We show that the simulations can reproduce various observational constraints with high accuracy. We also show how these signals depend on cosmology and feedback modelling, and we predict interesting cross-correlations between some of the signals that differs significantly from that predicted by previous mocks.Exascale Class simulations --A leap forward in Cosmological Hydrodynamics
Nick Frontiere Argonne National Laboratory
Exascale computing is enabling a new generation of cosmological simulations, spanning both gravity-only and full hydrodynamics at unprecedented scale. The Frontier Exascale Simulation is the largest hydrodynamic run to date by over an order of magnitude, evolving more than 4 trillion particles in a 4.6 Gpc volume down to redshift zero. The simulation is well suited for predictive comparisons with multi-wavelength observations and for constructing full-sky mock surveys for upcoming observatories. In addition, a new suite of gravity-only simulations is now reaching beyond 10 trillion particles, producing survey-encompassing mocks ideal for large-scale structure analysis and tests of primordial non-Gaussianity. This talk will highlight these capabilities and their role in advancing predictive cosmology and survey science.A multi-observation view of feedback: joint kinetic Sunyaev-Zeldovich, X-ray, and weak lensing measurements
Jared Siegel Princeton University
There is no consensus on how baryonic feedback shapes the underlying matter distribution. This uncertainty is a limiting systematic for cosmic shear inference, particularly in the era of LSST, and a fundamental question in the study of galaxy evolution. Modern simulations are tuned to reproduce a variety of galaxy observations, however, previous studies demonstrated that the implied amplitude of baryon feedback is dependent on the chosen observable: e.g., X-ray gas fractions, which are sensitive to material within the virial radius of massive clusters, or kinematic Sunyaev Zeldovich (kSZ) profiles, which extend to a few virial radii [Bigwood+2024, McCarthy+2024]. In this talk, we address the uncertain observational landscape, by adopting a multi-observation view of feedback. We will present measurements for the gas and mass distribution as seen by eROSITA X-rays, DESI+ACT kSZ, and galaxy-galaxy lensing across a wide range of redshifts (0Cosmological feedback from a halo assembly perspective
Hiranya Peiris University of Cambridge
The impact of feedback from galaxy formation on cosmological probes is typically quantified in terms of the suppression of the matter power spectrum in hydrodynamical compared to gravity-only simulations. In this paper, we instead study how baryonic feedback impacts halo assembly histories and thereby imprints on cosmological observables. We investigate the sensitivity of the thermal Sunyaev-Zel'dovich effect (tSZ) power spectrum, X-ray number counts, weak lensing and kinetic Sunyaev-Zel'dovich (kSZ) stacked profiles to halo populations as a function of mass and redshift. We then study the imprint of different feedback implementations in the FLAMINGO suite of cosmological simulations on the assembly histories of these halo populations, as a function of radial scale. We find that kSZ profiles target lower-mass halos (M200m∼10^13.1M⊙) compared to all other probes considered (M200m∼10^15M⊙). Feedback is inefficient in high-mass clusters with ∼10^15M⊙ at z=0, but was more efficient at earlier times in the same population, with a ∼5-10% effect on mass at 22). These findings are tied together by noting that, regardless of redshift, feedback most efficiently redistributes baryons when halos reach a mass of M200m≃10^12.8M⊙ and ceases to have any significant effect by the time M200m≃10^15M⊙. We put forward strategies for minimizing sensitivity of lensing analyses to baryonic feedback, and for exploring baryonic resolutions to the unexpectedly low tSZ power in cosmic microwave background observations.