2,756 research outputs found
Omega from the skewness of the cosmic velocity divergence
We propose a method for measuring the cosmological density parameter
from the statistics of the divergence field, , the
divergence of peculiar velocity, expressed in units of the Hubble constant, . The velocity field is spatially smoothed over to remove strongly nonlinear effects. Assuming weakly-nonlinear
gravitational evolution from Gaussian initial fluctuations, and using
second-order perturbative analysis, we show that \propto
-\Omega^{-0.6} ^2. The constant of proportionality depends on the
smoothing window. For a top-hat of radius R and volume-weighted smoothing, this
constant is , where . If the
power spectrum is a power law, , then . A Gaussian
window yields similar results. The resulting method for measuring is
independent of any assumed biasing relation between galaxies and mass.
The method has been successfully tested with numerical simulations. A
preliminary application to real data, provided by the POTENT recovery procedure
from observed velocities favors . However, because of an
uncertain sampling error, this result should be treated as an assessment of the
feasibility of our method rather than a definitive measurement of .Comment: 16 pages + 2 figures, uuencoded postscript file, also available by
anonymous ftp from ftp.cita.utoronto.ca in directory
/cita/francis/div_skewness, CITA 94-1
Three-Point Statistics from a New Perspective
Multipole expansion of spatial three-point statistics is introduced as a tool
for investigating and displaying configuration dependence. The novel
parametrization renders the relation between bi-spectrum and three-point
correlation function especially transparent as a set of two-dimensional Hankel
transforms. It is expected on theoretical grounds, that three-point statistics
can be described accurately with only a few multipoles. In particular, we show
that in the weakly non-linear regime, the multipoles of the reduced bispectrum,
, are significant only up to quadrupole. Moreover, the non-linear bias in
the weakly non-linear regime only affects the monopole order of these
statistics. As a consequence, a simple, novel set of estimators can be
constructed to constrain galaxy bias. In addition, the quadrupole to dipole
ratio is independent of the bias, thus it becomes a novel diagnostic of the
underlying theoretical assumptions: weakly non-linear gravity and perturbative
local bias. To illustrate the use of our approach, we present predictions based
on both power law, and CDM models. We show that the presently favoured
SDSS-WMAP concordance model displays strong ``baryon bumps'' in the 's.
Finally, we sketch out three practical techniques estimate these novel
quantities: they amount to new, and for the first time edge corrected,
estimators for the bispectrum.Comment: 5 pages 6 figures, ApL accepte
Extended Perturbation Theory for the Local Density Distribution Function
Perturbation theory makes it possible to calculate the probability
distribution function (PDF) of the large scale density field in the small
variance limit. For top hat smoothing and scale-free Gaussian initial
fluctuations, the result depends only on the linear variance, sigma_linear, and
its logarithmic derivative with respect to the filtering scale
-(n_linear+3)=dlog sigma_linear^2/dlog L (Bernardeau 1994). In this paper, we
measure the PDF and its low-order moments in scale-free simulations evolved
well into the nonlinear regime and compare the results with the above
predictions, assuming that the spectral index and the variance are adjustable
parameters, n_eff and sigma_eff=sigma, where sigma is the true, nonlinear
variance. With these additional degrees of freedom, results from perturbation
theory provide a good fit of the PDFs, even in the highly nonlinear regime. The
value of n_eff is of course equal to n_linear when sigma << 1, and it decreases
with increasing sigma. A nearly flat plateau is reached when sigma >> 1. In
this regime, the difference between n_eff and n_linear increases when n_linear
decreases. For initial power-spectra with n_linear=-2,-1,0,+1, we find n_eff ~
-9,-3,-1,-0.5 when sigma^2 ~ 100.Comment: 13 pages, 6 figures, Latex (MN format), submitted to MNRA
Self-similarity and scaling behavior of scale-free gravitational clustering
We measure the scaling properties of the probability distribution of the
smoothed density field in -body simulations of expanding universes with
scale-free initial power-spectra, with particular attention to the predictions
of the stable clustering hypothesis. We concentrate our analysis on the ratios
, , where is the averaged -body correlation function over a cell of radius
. The behavior of the higher order correlations is studied through that
of the void probability distribution function.
As functions of , the quantities , ,
exhibit two plateaus separated by a smooth transition around . In the weakly nonlinear regime, {\bar \xi}_2 \la 1, the results are in
reasonable agreement with the predictions of perturbation theory. In the
nonlinear regime, , the function is
larger than in the weakly nonlinear regime, and increasingly so with . It
is well-fitted by the expression $S_Q= ({\bar \xi}_2/100)^{0.045(Q-2)}\
{\widetilde S}_Qn. This weak dependence on scale proves {\em a
small, but significant departure from the stable clustering predictions} at
least for n=0n=+1P_0S_Qn=-2n=-1$. In these two cases, our measurements are not accurate enough to be
discriminant.Comment: 31 pages, postscript file, figure 1 missing. Postscript file
including figure 1 available at
ftp://ftp-astro-theory.fnal.gov:/pub/Publications/Pub-95-256-
Galactic dust polarized emission at high latitudes and CMB polarization
We estimate the dust polarized emission in our galaxy at high galactic
latitudes, which is the dominant foreground for measuring CMB polarization
using the high frequency instrument (HFI) aboard Planck surveyor. We compare it
with the level of CMB polarization and conclude that, for angular scales , the scalar-induced CMB polarization and temperature-polarization
cross-correlation are much larger than the foreground level at . The tensor-induced signals seem to be at best comparable to the
foreground level.}Comment: Latex document, 4 pages, 2 figures, to appear in "Fundamental
parameters in Cosmology", Rencontres de Moriond, 199
Error estimation for the MAP experiment
We report here the first full sky component separation and CMB power spectrum
estimation using a Wiener filtering technique on simulated data from the
upcoming MAP experiment, set to launch in early 2001. The simulations included
contributions from the three dominant astrophysical components expected in the
five MAP spectral bands, namely CMB radiation, Galactic dust, and synchrotron
emission. We assumed a simple homogeneous and isotropic white noise model and
performed our analysis up to a spherical harmonic multipole lmax=512 on the
fraction of the sky defined by b>20 degrees. We find that the reconstruction
errors are reasonably well fitted by a Gaussian with an rms of 24 K, but
with significant deviations in the tails. Our results further support the
predictions on the resulting CMB power spectrum of a previous estimate by
Bouchet and Gispert (1999), which entailed a number of assumptions this work
removes.Comment: 5 pages, 3 color figures, version accepted in A&A Letter
Simulations of the Microwave Sky and of its ``Observations''
Here follows a preliminary report on the construction of fake millimeter and
sub-millimeter skies, as observed by virtual instruments, e.g. the COBRA/SAMBA
mission, using theoretical modeling and data extrapolations. Our goal is to
create maps as realistic as possible of the relevant physical contributions
which may contribute to the detected signals. This astrophysical modeling is
followed by simulations of the measurement process itself by a given
instrumental configuration. This will enable a precise determination of what
can and cannot be achieved with a particular experimental configuration, and
provide a feedback on how to improve the overall design. It is a key step on
the way to define procedures for the separation of the different physical
processes in the future observed maps. Note that this tool will also prove
useful in preparing and analyzing current (\eg\ balloon borne) Microwave
Background experiments. Keywords: Cosmology -- Microwave Background
Anisotropies.Comment: 6 pages of uuencoded compressed postscript (1.2 Mb uncompressed), to
appear in the proceedings of the meeting "Far Infrared and Sub-millimeter
Space Missions in the Next Decade'', Paris, France, Eds. M. Sauvage, Space
Science Revie
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