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The void halo mass function: a promising probe of neutrino mass

Published 16 Oct 2019 in astro-ph.CO | (1910.07553v1)

Abstract: Cosmic voids, the underdense regions in the universe, are particularly sensitive to diffuse density components such as cosmic neutrinos. This sensitivity is enhanced by the match between void sizes and the free-streaming scale of massive neutrinos. Using the massive neutrino simulations \texttt{MassiveNuS}, we investigate the effect of neutrino mass on dark matter halos as a function of environment. We find that the halo mass function depends strongly on neutrino mass and that this dependence is more pronounced in voids than in high-density environments. An observational program that measured the characteristic mass of the most massive halos in voids should be able to place novel constraints on the sum of the masses of neutrinos $\sum m_\nu$. The neutrino mass effect in the simulations is quite strong: In a 512$3$ $h{-3}$ Mpc$3$ survey, the mean mass of the 1000 most massive halos in the void interiors is $(4.82 \pm 0.11) \times 10{12} h{-1}M_{\odot}$ for $\sum m_\nu = 0.6$ eV and $(8.21 \pm 0.13) \times 10{12} h{-1}M_{\odot}$ for $\sum m_\nu = 0.1$ eV. Subaru (SuMIRe), Euclid and WFIRST will have both spectroscopic and weak lensing surveys. Covering volumes at least 50 times larger than our simulations, they should be sensitive probes of neutrino mass through void substructure.

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