249 research outputs found
Tidal fields and structure formation
The role of tidal shear in the formation of structure in the Universe is explored. To illustrate the possible and sometimes dramatic impact of tidal fields we focus on the evolution of voids. We firstly analyze the role of tidal fields both in the highly symmetric situation of an initially homogeneous ellipsoidal underdensity embedded in an artificially imposed tidal field. In addition, we present selfconsistent case studies consisting of N-body simulations that start from constrained Gaussian initial conditions in which the matter distribution is appropriately sculpted to yield an a priori specified tidal field. We conclude that voids may indeed be induced to collapse. Also, we present evidence for the strong relation between tidal fields and filaments in the mass distribution
Continuous Fields and Discrete Samples: Reconstruction through Delaunay Tessellations
Here we introduce the Delaunay Density Estimator Method. Its purpose is
rendering a fully volume-covering reconstruction of a density field from a set
of discrete data points sampling this field. Reconstructing density or
intensity fields from a set of irregularly sampled data is a recurring key
issue in operations on astronomical data sets, both in an observational context
as well as in the context of numerical simulations. Our technique is based upon
the stochastic geometric concept of the Delaunay tessellation generated by the
point set. We shortly describe the method, and illustrate its virtues by means
of an application to an N-body simulation of cosmic structure formation. The
presented technique is a fully adaptive method: automatically it probes high
density regions at maximum possible resolution, while low density regions are
recovered as moderately varying regions devoid of the often irritating
shot-noise effects. Of equal importance is its capability to sharply and
undilutedly recover anisotropic density features like filaments and walls. The
prominence of such features at a range of resolution levels within a
hierarchical clustering scenario as the example of the standard CDM scenario is
shown to be impressively recovered by our scheme.Comment: 4 pages, 2 figures, accepted for publication in Astronomy &
Astrophysics Letter
Rotation of Cosmic Voids and Void-Spin Statistics
We present a theoretical study of void spins and their correlation
properties. The concept of the spin angular momentum for an unbound void is
introduced to quantify the effect of the tidal field on the distribution of
matter that make up the void. Both the analytical and numerical approaches are
used for our study. Analytically, we adopt the linear tidal torque model to
evaluate the void spin-spin and spin-density correlations, assuming that a void
forms in the initial region where the inertia momentum and the tidal shear
tensors are maximally uncorrelated with each other. Numerically, we use the
Millennium run galaxy catalog to find voids and calculate their spin
statistics. The numerical results turn out to be in excellent agreement with
the analytic predictions, both of which consistently show that there are strong
spatial alignments between the spin axes of neighbor voids and strong
anti-alignments between the void spin axes and the directions to the nearest
voids. We expect that our work will provide a deeper insight into the origin
and properties of voids and the large scale structure.Comment: accepted version, ApJ in press, the concept of void spins explained,
typos correcte
Merging and fragmentation in the Burgers dynamics
We explore the noiseless Burgers dynamics in the inviscid limit, the
so-called ``adhesion model'' in cosmology, in a regime where (almost) all the
fluid particles are embedded within point-like massive halos. Following
previous works, we focus our investigations on a ``geometrical'' model, where
the matter evolution within the shock manifold is defined from a geometrical
construction. This hypothesis is at variance with the assumption that the usual
continuity equation holds but, in the inviscid limit, both models agree in the
regular regions. Taking advantage of the formulation of the dynamics of this
``geometrical model'' in terms of Legendre transforms and convex hulls, we
study the evolution with time of the distribution of matter and the associated
partitions of the Lagrangian and Eulerian spaces. We describe how the halo mass
distribution derives from a triangulation in Lagrangian space, while the dual
Voronoi-like tessellation in Eulerian space gives the boundaries of empty
regions with shock nodes at their vertices. We then emphasize that this
dynamics actually leads to halo fragmentations for space dimensions greater or
equal to 2 (for the inviscid limit studied in this article). This is most
easily seen from the properties of the Lagrangian-space triangulation and we
illustrate this process in the two-dimensional (2D) case. In particular, we
explain how point-like halos only merge through three-body collisions while
two-body collisions always give rise to two new massive shock nodes (in 2D).
This generalizes to higher dimensions and we briefly illustrate the
three-dimensional (3D) case. This leads to a specific picture for the
continuous formation of massive halos through successive halo fragmentations
and mergings.Comment: 21 pages, final version published in Phys.Rev.
Alignments of Voids in the Cosmic Web
We investigate the shapes and mutual alignment of voids in the large scale
matter distribution of a LCDM cosmology simulation. The voids are identified
using the novel WVF void finder technique. The identified voids are quite
nonspherical and slightly prolate, with axis ratios in the order of c:b:a
approx. 0.5:0.7:1. Their orientations are strongly correlated with significant
alignments spanning scales >30 Mpc/h.
We also find an intimate link between the cosmic tidal field and the void
orientations. Over a very wide range of scales we find a coherent and strong
alignment of the voids with the tidal field computed from the smoothed density
distribution. This orientation-tide alignment remains significant on scales
exceeding twice the typical void size, which shows that the long range external
field is responsible for the alignment of the voids. This confirms the view
that the large scale tidal force field is the main agent for the large scale
spatial organization of the Cosmic Web.Comment: 10 pages, 4 figures, submitted to MNRAS, for high resolution version,
see http://www.astro.rug.nl/~weygaert/tim1publication/voidshape.pd
Unfolding the Hierarchy of Voids
We present a framework for the hierarchical identification and
characterization of voids based on the Watershed Void Finder. The Hierarchical
Void Finder is based on a generalization of the scale space of a density field
invoked in order to trace the hierarchical nature and structure of cosmological
voids. At each level of the hierarchy, the watershed transform is used to
identify the voids at that particular scale. By identifying the overlapping
regions between watershed basins in adjacent levels, the hierarchical void tree
is constructed. Applications on a hierarchical Voronoi model and on a set of
cosmological simulations illustrate its potential.Comment: 5 pages, 2 figure
KK246, a dwarf galaxy with extended H I disk in the Local Void
We have found that KK 246, the only confirmed galaxy located within the
nearby Tully Void, is a dwarf galaxy with an extremely extended H I disk and
signs of an H I cloud with anomalous velocity. It also exhibits clear
misalignment between the kinematical major and minor axes, indicative of an
oval distortion, and a general misalignment between the H I and optical major
axes. We measure a H I mass of 1.05 +- 0.08 x 10^8 M_sun, and a H I extent 5
times that of the stellar disk, one of the most extended H I disks known. We
estimate a dynamical mass of 4.1 x 10^9 M_sun, making this also one of the
darkest galaxies known, with a mass-to-light ratio of 89. The relative
isolation and extreme underdense environment make this an interesting case for
examining the role of gas accretion in galaxy evolution.Comment: 15 pages, 8 figures, 2 tables, accepted for publication in A
Voids as a Precision Probe of Dark Energy
A signature of the dark energy equation of state may be observed in the shape
of voids. We estimate the constraints on cosmological parameters that would be
determined from the ellipticity distribution of voids from future spectroscopic
surveys already planned for the study of large scale structure.
The constraints stem from the sensitivity of the distribution of ellipticity
to the cosmological parameters through the variance of fluctuations of the
density field smoothed at some length scale. This length scale can be chosen to
be of the order of the comoving radii of voids at very early times when the
fluctuations are Gaussian distributed. We use Fisher estimates to show that the
constraints from void ellipticities are promising. Combining these constraints
with other traditional methods results in the improvement of the Dark Energy
Task Force Figure of Merit on the dark energy parameters by an order of hundred
for future experiments. The estimates of these future constraints depend on a
number of systematic issues which require further study using simulations. We
outline these issues and study the impact of certain observational and
theoretical systematics on the forecasted constraints on dark energy
parameters.Comment: Submitted to PRD, 22 pages 9 figure
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