English

Evidence for the Missing Baryons in the Angular Correlation of the Diffuse X-ray Background

Astrophysics 2014-11-18 v1

Abstract

The amount of detected baryons in the local Universe is at least a factor of two smaller than measured at high redshift. It is believed that a significant fraction of the baryons in the current Universe is "hiding" in a hot filamentary structure filling the intergalactic space, the Warm-Hot Intergalactic Medium (WHIMWHIM). We found evidence of the missing baryons in the WHIMWHIM by detecting their signature on the angular correlation of diffuse X-ray emission with the XMM-Newton satellite. Our result indicates that (12±5)(12\pm 5)% of the total diffuse X-ray emission in the energy range 0.4-0.6 keV is due to intergalactic filaments. The statistical significance of our detection is several sigmas (χ2>136\chi ^2>136 N=19). The error bar in the X-ray flux is dominated, instead, by cosmic variation and model uncertainties.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.0812.2219,
  title  = {Evidence for the Missing Baryons in the Angular Correlation of the Diffuse X-ray Background},
  author = {M. Galeazzi and A. Gupta and E. Ursino},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:0812.2219},
  year   = {2014}
}

Comments

15 pages, 3 figures, Accepted for publication on ApJ

R2 v1 2026-06-21T11:51:00.581Z