The Effect of Neutrinos on the Matter Distribution as Probed by the Intergalactic Medium
This paper presents a detailed investigation of the impact of neutrinos on the spatial distribution of matter, particularly focusing on the Intergalactic Medium (IGM) and its implications for the Lyman-α forest observed in quasar spectra. The research utilizes a suite of full hydrodynamical cosmological simulations to quantify this impact. Crucially, neutrino free-streaming results in a scale-dependent suppression of the matter power spectrum that deviates from linear theory predictions. This suppression is found to be approximately 25% larger and strongly redshift dependent at scales probed by Lyman-α forest data.
Numerical Simulations and Predictions
Neutrinos, known for their non-zero mass and flavor oscillations, have significant implications beyond the Standard Model of particle physics. Their ability to stream freely through the cosmos affects both cosmic expansion and the growth of structure. Early neutrinos were relativistic, but those in the mass range 0.05 eV ≤Σmν≤1.5 eV become non-relativistic at redshifts 100 to 3000 and contribute as a form of hot dark matter. While linear theory can approximate neutrino effects on large-scale structure, small scales where neutrino effects are most pronounced require non-linear numerical simulation.
This research leverages the {\small GADGET-3} hydrodynamical code to model the neutrino effects in cosmological simulations. Two techniques are implemented: a particle-based approach and a grid-based method, each with distinct advantages and limitations. The grid-based approach, while free of Poisson noise, assumes linear evolution of neutrino density perturbations, which is insufficient for capturing all non-linear effects. Conversely, the particle-based approach captures these non-linearities but suffers from shot noise.
Key Findings
- Matter Power Spectrum Suppression: At z=3, the simulations reveal that neutrinos suppress power in the matter distribution beyond predictions of linear theory by about 10.5fν at scales k(h/Mpc)∈[0.3,3]. This suppression increases with neutrino mass and varies with redshift, demonstrating that non-linear effects are significantly stronger.
- Comparative Analysis: The paper contrasts simulations without neutrinos calibrated to match the initial σ8 values of neutrino-inclusive models. It reports that compared to simulations with neutrinos, those with adjusted σ8 underpredict power on small scales by up to 5-10%, indicating that simple σ8 corrections fail to capture the full complexity of neutrino effects.
- Flux Power Spectrum Insights: Extracting mock Lyman-α forest spectra, the analysis reveals that suppressions in matter power lead to a notable reduction in flux power, possibly observable with future data precision levels. Specifically, the flux power spectrum shows a 2.5% (up to 5%) decrease for neutrino masses Σmν=0.3 eV (0.6 eV) — a non-trivial effect for current observational capabilities.
Implications and Future Directions
The paper culminates in setting an upper limit on neutrino masses based solely on Lyman-α forest data, affirming an upper limit of Σmν<0.9 eV at 2σ confidence. This limit is competitive with constraints derived from cosmic microwave background measurements. Importantly, the findings highlight the necessity for consistency between large- and small-scale measurements for robust neutrino mass constraints.
Given these results, the paper emphasizes the pivotal role of hydrodynamical simulations in improving our understanding of neutrino cosmology. The work suggests that future advancements in computational techniques and observational data precision will enable a finely-tuned measurement of neutrino masses. These findings are critical for refining models of cosmic structure formation and represent an essential step towards integrating neutrino physics with the broader cosmological framework.