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So, I have read that the SZ effect is virtually independent of redshift. I follow the argument that the factor of (1+z)^-4 in the surface brightness cancels the (1+z)^4 factor in the photon energy density at the cluster (three factors from space being smaller in each dimension, one from the photon frequency being higher).
However, surely the clusters at higher redshifts have higher temperatures and electron number densities (probably considerably higher, when z is large enough)? I don't understand why this doesn't correspond to a higher contribution to dT/T_{CMB} from these high-z clusters.
Any help would be appreciated.
Thanks.
However, surely the clusters at higher redshifts have higher temperatures and electron number densities (probably considerably higher, when z is large enough)? I don't understand why this doesn't correspond to a higher contribution to dT/T_{CMB} from these high-z clusters.
Any help would be appreciated.
Thanks.