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1.4.5 Cluster Baryons vs. Big Bang Nucleosynthesis
A review
(Copi, Schramm, &
Turner 1995)
of Big Bang
Nucleosynthesis (BBN) and observations indicating primordial
abundances of the light isotopes concludes that
0.009h-2
b
0.02h-2 for
concordance with all the abundances, and
0.006h-2
b
0.03h-2
if only deuterium is used.
For h = 0.5, the corresponding upper limits on
b are 0.08 and
0.12, respectively. The recent observations
(Songaila et
al. 1994a,
Carswell et
al. 1994)
of a possible deuterium line in a hydrogen cloud
at redshift z = 3.32 in the spectrum of quasar 0014+813,
indicating a deuterium abundance D/H ~ 2 ~
10-4 (and therefore
b
0.006h-2), are inconsistent
with D/H observations by Tytler and collaborators
(Tytler et al. 1996,
Burles & Tytler 1996)
in systems at z = 3.57 (toward
Q1937-1009) and at z = 2.504,
but with a deuterium abundance about ten times lower. These lower
D/H values are consistent with
solar system measurements of D and 3He, and they imply
b
h2 = 0.024 ± 0.05, or
b in the range 0.08-0.11 for
h = 0.5. If these represent the true D/H, then if the earlier
observations were correct they were
most probably of a Ly
forest line.
Rugers & Hogan (1996)
argue that the width of the z = 3.32 absorption
features is better fit by deuterium, although they admit that only a
statistical sample of absorbers will settle the issue. There is a new
possible detection of D at z = 4.672 in the absorption spectrum
of
QSO BR1202-0725
(Wampler et al. 1996)
and at z = 3.086 toward Q0420-388
(Carswell et
al. 1996),
but they can only give upper limits on D/H.
Wampler (1996) and
Songaila et
al. (1997)
claim that
Tytler et al. (1996)
have overestimated the HI column density in their system, and therefore
underestimated D/H. But
Burles & Tytler
(1996)
argue that the two systems that they have analyzed
are much more convincing as real detections of deuterium, that their
HI column density measurement is reliable, and that the fact that they
measure the same D/H ~ 2.4 x 10-5 in both systems makes it
likely that this is the primordial value. Moreover,
Tytler, Burles, &
Kirkman (1996)
have recently presented a higher resolution spectrum
of Q0014+813 in which ``deuterium absorption is neither
required nor
suggested,'' which would of course completely undercut the argument of
Hogan and collaborators for high D/H. Finally, the Tytler group has
analyzed their new Keck LRIS spectra of the absorption system toward
Q1937-1009, and they say that the lower HI column density advocated
by Songaila et
al. (1997)
is ruled out (Burles and Tytler, private
communications, 1997). Of course, one or two additional high quality
D/H measurements would be very helpful to really settle the issue.
There is an entirely different line of argument that also favors the
higher b implied by
the lower D/H of Tytler et al. This is
the requirement that the high-redshift intergalactic medium contain
enough neutral hydrogen to produce the observed Lyman
forest
clouds given standard estimates of the ultraviolet ionizing flux from
quasars. The minimum required
b
0.05 h50-2
(Gnedin & Hui 1996,
Weinberg et al. 1997)
is considerably higher than that advocated by higher D/H values, but
consistent with that implied by the lower D/H measurements.
It thus
seems that the lower D/H and correspondingly higher b
0.1
h50-2 are more likely to be correct,
although it is
worrisome that the relatively high value Yp
0.25 predicted
by standard BBN for the primordial 4He abundance does not appear to
be favored by the data
(Olive et al. 1996,
but cf.
Sasselov &
Goldwirth 1995,
Schramm & Turner
1997).
White et al. (1993) have emphasized that X-ray observations of clusters, especially Coma, show that the abundance of baryons, mostly in the form of gas (which typically amounts to several times the mass of the cluster galaxies), is about 20% of the total cluster mass if h is as low as 0.5 (see also Section 4.4). For the Coma cluster they find that the baryon fraction within the Abell radius (1.5h-1 Mpc) is
where the first term comes from the galaxies and the second from gas.
If clusters are a fair sample of both baryons and dark matter, as they
are expected to be based on simulations
(Evrard, Metzler,
& Navarro 1996),
then this is 2-3 times the amount of baryonic mass expected on
the basis of BBN in an = 1,
h
0.5 universe, though it
is just what one would expect in a universe with
0
0.3
(Steigman & Felten
1995).
The fair sample hypothesis implies that
A recent review of X-ray measurements gas in a sample of clusters
(White & Fabian 1995)
finds that the baryon mass fraction within about 1 Mpc lies between 10
and 22% (for h = 0.5; the limits scale as
h-3/2), and argues
that it is unlikely that: (a) the gas could be clumped enough to
lead to significant overestimates of the total gas mass - the main
escape route considered in
White et
al. 1993 (cf.
Gunn & Thomas 1996).
The gas mass would also be overestimated if large tangled
magnetic fields provide a significant part of the pressure in the
central regions of some clusters
(Loeb & Mao 1994,
but cf. Felten 1996);
this can be checked by observation of Faraday rotation of sources behind
clusters
(Kronberg 1994).
If =
1, the alternatives are then
either: (b) that clusters have more mass than virial estimates
based on the cluster galaxy velocities or estimates based on
hydrostatic equilibrium
(Balland &
Blanchard 1995)
of the gas at the
measured X-ray temperature (which is surprising since they agree:
Bahcall & Lubin
1994);
(c) that the usual BBN estimate of
b is wrong; or (d)
that the fair sample hypothesis is
wrong (for which there is even some observational evidence:
Loewenstein &
Mushotzky 1996).
It is interesting that there are
indications from weak lensing that at least
some clusters (e.g., for A2218 see
Squires et al. 1996;
for this cluster
the mass estimate from lensing becomes significantly higher than that
from X-rays when the new ASCA satellite data, indicating that the
temperature falls at large radii, is taken into account:
Loewenstein 1996)
may actually have extended halos of dark matter -
something that is expected to a greater extent if the dark matter is a
mixture of cold and hot components, since the hot component clusters
less than the cold
(Kofman et al. 1996).
If so, the number density of
clusters as a function of mass is higher than usually estimated, which
has interesting cosmological implications (e.g.
8 is higher
than usually estimated). It is of course possible that the solution
is some combination of alternatives (a)-(d). If none of the
alternatives is right, then the only conclusion left is that
0
0.3.
Notice that the rather high baryon fraction b
0.1
(0.5/h)2 implied by the recent Tytler et
al. measurements of low D/H
helps resolve the cluster baryon crisis for
= 1 - it is
escape route (c) above. With the higher
b implied by the low
D/H, there is now a ``baryon cluster crisis'' for low-
0
models! Even with a baryon fraction at the high end of observations,
fb
0.2
(h/0.5)-3/2, the fair sample hypothesis with this
b implies
0
0.5
(h / 0.5)-1/2.