786 research outputs found
Revisiting the angular momentum growth of protostructures evolved from non-Gaussian initial conditions
I adopt a formalism previously developed by Catelan and Theuns (CT) in order
to estimate the impact of primordial non-Gaussianity on the quasi-linear spin
growth of cold dark matter protostructures. A variety of bispectrum shapes are
considered, spanning the currently most popular early Universe models for the
occurrence of non-Gaussian density fluctuations. In their original work, CT
considered several other shapes, and suggested that only for one of those does
the impact of non-Gaussianity seem to be perturbatively tractable. For that
model, and on galactic scales, the next-to-linear non-Gaussian contribution to
the angular momentum variance has an upper limit of with respect to
the linear one. I find that all the new models considered in this work can also
be seemingly described via perturbation theory. Considering current bounds on
for inflationary non-Gaussianity leads to the quasi-linear
contribution being of the linear one. This result motivates the
systematic study of higher-order non-Gaussian corrections, in order to attain a
comprehensive picture of how structure gravitational dynamics descends from the
physics of the primordial Universe.Comment: 5 pages, 3 figures. Accepted for publication by MNRAS Letter
Constraining Primordial Magnetic Fields with Future Cosmic Shear Surveys
The origin of astrophysical magnetic fields observed in galaxies and clusters
of galaxies is still unclear. One possibility is that primordial magnetic
fields generated in the early Universe provide seeds that grow through
compression and turbulence during structure formation. A cosmological magnetic
field present prior to recombination would produce substantial matter
clustering at intermediate/small scales, on top of the standard inflationary
power spectrum. In this work we study the effect of this alteration on one
particular cosmological observable, cosmic shear. We adopt the semi-analytic
halo model in order to describe the non-linear clustering of matter, and feed
it with the altered mass variance induced by primordial magnetic fields. We
find that the convergence power spectrum is, as expected, substantially
enhanced at intermediate/small angular scales, with the exact amplitude of the
enhancement depending on the magnitude and power-law index of the magnetic
field power spectrum. We use the predicted statistical errors for a future
wide-field cosmic shear survey, on the model of the ESA Cosmic Vision mission
\emph{Euclid}, in order to forecast constraints on the amplitude of primordial
magnetic fields as a function of the spectral index. We find that the amplitude
will be constrained at the level of nG for , and at the
level of nG for . The latter is at the same level of
lower bounds coming from the secondary emission of gamma-ray sources, implying
that for high spectral indices \emph{Euclid} will certainly be able to detect
primordial magnetic fields, if they exist. The present study shows how
large-scale structure surveys can be used for both understanding the origins of
astrophysical magnetic fields and shedding new light on the physics of the
pre-recombination Universe. (abridged)Comment: 24 pages, 9 figures. To appear on JCA
Imprints of primordial non-Gaussianity on the number counts of cosmic shear peaks
We studied the effect of primordial non-Gaussianity with varied bispectrum
shapes on the number counts of signal-to-noise peaks in wide field cosmic shear
maps. The two cosmological contributions to this particular weak lensing
statistic, namely the chance projection of Large Scale Structure and the
occurrence of real, cluster-sized dark matter halos, have been modeled
semi-analytically, thus allowing to easily introduce the effect of non-Gaussian
initial conditions. We performed a Fisher matrix analysis by taking into
account the full covariance of the peak counts in order to forecast the joint
constraints on the level of primordial non-Gaussianity and the amplitude of the
matter power spectrum that are expected by future wide field imaging surveys.
We find that positive-skewed non-Gaussianity increases the number counts of
cosmic shear peaks, more so at high signal-to-noise values, where the signal is
mostly dominated by massive clusters as expected. The increment is at the level
of ~1 for f_NL=10 and ~10 for f_NL=100 for a local shape of the primordial
bispectrum, while different bispectrum shapes give generically a smaller
effect. For a future survey on the model of the proposed ESA space mission
Euclid and by avoiding the strong assumption of being capable to distinguish
the weak lensing signal of galaxy clusters from chance projection of Large
Scale Structures we forecasted a 1-sigma error on the level of non-Gaussianity
of ~30-40 for the local and equilateral models, and of ~100-200 for the less
explored enfolded and orthogonal bispectrum shapes.Comment: 13 pages, 8 figures, 1 table. Submitted to MNRA
Primordial density perturbations with running spectral index: impact on non-linear cosmic structures
(abridged) We explore the statistical properties of non-linear cosmic
structures in a flat CDM cosmology in which the index of the
primordial power spectrum for scalar perturbations is allowed to depend on the
scale. Within the inflationary paradigm, the running of the scalar spectral
index can be related to the properties of the inflaton potential, and it is
hence of critical importance to test it with all kinds of observations, which
cover the linear and non-linear regime of gravitational instability. We focus
on the amount of running allowed by an updated
combination of CMB anisotropy data and the 2dF Galaxy Redshift Survey. Our
analysis constrains
at 95% Confidence Level when (not) taking into
account primordial gravitational waves in a ratio as predicted by canonical
single field inflation, in agreement with other works. For the cosmological
models best fitting the data both with and without running we studied the
abundance of galaxy clusters and of rare objects, the halo bias, the
concentration of dark matter halos, the Baryon Acoustic Oscillation, the power
spectrum of cosmic shear, and the Integrated Sachs-Wolfe effect. We find that
counting galaxy clusters in future X-ray and Sunyaev-Zel'dovich surveys could
discriminate between the two models, more so if broad redshift information
about the cluster samples will be available. Likewise, measurements of the
power spectrum of cosmological weak lensing as performed by planned all-sky
optical surveys such as EUCLID could detect a running of the primordial
spectral index, provided the uncertainties about the source redshift
distribution and the underlying matter power spectrum are well under control.Comment: 17 pages, 14 figures, 4 tables. Accepted for publication on MNRA
Strong lensing in the MareNostrum Universe II: scaling relations and optical depths
The strong lensing events that are observed in compact clusters of galaxies
can, both statistically and individually, return important clues about the
structural properties of the most massive structures in the Universe.
Substantial work is ongoing in order to understand the degree of similarity
between the lensing cluster population and the population of clusters as a
whole, with members of the former being likely more massive, compact, and
substructured than members of the latter. In this work we exploit synthetic
clusters extracted from the {\sc MareNostrum Universe} cosmological simulation
in order to estimate the correlation between the strong lensing efficiency and
other bulk properties of lensing clusters, such as the virial mass and the
bolometric X-ray luminosity. We found that a positive correlation exist between
all these quantities, with the substantial scatter being smaller for the
luminosity-cross section relation. We additionally used the relation between
the lensing efficiency and the virial mass in order to construct a synthetic
optical depth that agrees well with the true one, while being extremely faster
to be evaluated. We finally estimated what fraction of the total giant arc
abundance is recovered when galaxy clusters are selected according to their
dynamical activity or their X-ray luminosity. Our results show that there is a
high probability for high-redshift strong lensing clusters to be substantially
far away from dynamical equilibrium, and that of the total amount of
giant arcs are lost if looking only at very X-ray luminous objects.Comment: 15 pages, 10 figures. Accepted by A&
The effect of primordial non-Gaussianity on the skeleton of cosmic shear maps
(abridged) We explore the imprints of deviations from Gaussian primordial
density fluctuations on the skeleton of the large-scale matter distribution as
mapped through cosmological weak lensing. We computed the skeleton length of
simulated effective convergence maps covering sq. deg each, extracted
from a suite of cosmological body runs with different levels of local
primordial non-Gaussianity. The latter is expected to alter the structure
formation process with respect to the fiducial Gaussian scenario, and thus to
leave a signature on the cosmic web. We found that alterations of the initial
conditions consistently modify both the cumulative and the differential
skeleton length, although the effect is generically smaller than the cosmic
variance and depends on the smoothing of the map prior to the skeleton
computation. Nevertheless, the qualitative shape of these deviations is rather
similar to their primordial counterparts, implying that skeleton statistics
retain good memory of the initial conditions. We performed a statistical
analysis in order to find out at what Confidence Level primordial
non-Gaussianity could be constrained by the skeleton test on cosmic shear maps
of the size we adopted. At 68.3% Confidence Level we found an error on the
measured level of primordial non-Gaussianity of ,
while at 90% Confidence Level it is of . While
these values by themselves are not competitive with the current constraints,
weak lensing maps larger than those used here would have a smaller
field-to-field variance, and thus would likely lead to tighter constraints. A
rough estimate indicates a few tens at 68.3%
Confidence Level for an all-sky weak lensing survey.Comment: 11 pages, 9 figures. Accepted for publication on MNRA
Selection effects on X-ray and strong-lensing clusters in various cosmologies
Galaxy clusters are hotter and more X-ray luminous than in quiescence while
they undergo major mergers, which also transiently increase their
strong-lensing efficiency. We use semi-analytic models for both effects to
study how cluster dynamics in different dark-energy models affects the X-ray
selected cluster population and its strong-lensing optical depth. We find that
mergers increase the number of observable X-ray clusters by factors of a few
and considerably broaden their redshift distribution. Strong-lensing optical
depths are increased by a very similar amount. Quite independent of cosmology,
X-ray bright clusters above a flux limit of produce of the strong-lensing optical depth, and only
above a flux limit of if
mergers are taken into account.Comment: 11 pages, 9 figures. Version accepted by A&
The strongest gravitational lenses: I. The statistical impact of cluster mergers
For more than a decade now, it has been controversial whether or not the high
rate of giant gravitational arcs and the largest observed Einstein radii are
consistent with the standard cosmological model. Recent studies indicate that
mergers provide an efficient mechanism to substantially increase the
strong-lensing efficiency of individual clusters. Based on purely semi-analytic
methods, we investigated the statistical impact of cluster mergers on the
distribution of the largest Einstein radii and the optical depth for giant
gravitational arcs of selected cluster samples. Analysing representative
all-sky realizations of clusters at redshifts z < 1 and assuming a constant
source redshift of z_s = 2.0, we find that mergers increase the number of
Einstein radii above 10 arcsec (20 arcsec) by ~ 35 % (~ 55 %). Exploiting the
tight correlation between Einstein radii and lensing cross sections, we infer
that the optical depth for giant gravitational arcs with a length-to-width
ratio > 7.5 of those clusters with Einstein radii above 10 arcsec (20 arcsec)
increases by ~ 45 % (85 %). Our findings suggest that cluster mergers
significantly influence in particular the statistical lensing properties of the
strongest gravitational lenses. We conclude that semi-analytic studies must
inevitably take these events into account before questioning the standard
cosmological model on the basis of the largest observed Einstein radii and the
statistics of giant gravitational arcs.Comment: 23 pages, 18 figures; accepted for publication in Astronomy and
Astrophysics; v2: minor corrections (added clarifying comments; added Fig.
19) to match the accepted versio
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