Astronomy and astrophysics

Characterizing the missing baryons in the Universe: Prospects for ALMA

by Jesper Rasmussen (DARK Cosmology Centre)

Europe/Stockholm
FC 61

FC 61

Description
Observations reveal a shortfall of baryons in the nearby Universe when compared to results obtained at high redshift. Most of these nearby "missing baryons" are believed to reside outside galaxies in a warm-hot gaseous phase, tracing the large-scale structure of the Universe. This material should be observable in emission or absorption using ultra-sensitive X-ray observations, but such observations are pushing current X-ray instrumentation to its limits, and only tentative and disputed claims of detection have been made. An alternative approach to mapping these baryons is to search for the faint hyperfine structure lines they emit at millimetre wavelengths. With the advent of ALMA, this may now have become feasible. I will describe the background for this, and discuss some of the prospects for using ALMA to detect these missing baryons and to characterize their role in galaxy formation and evolution.