31,775 research outputs found

    The time-evolution of bias

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    We study the evolution of the bias factor b and the mass-galaxy correlation coefficient r in a simple analytic model for galaxy formation and the gravitational growth of clustering. The model shows that b and r can be strongly time-dependent, but tend to approach unity even if galaxy formation never ends as the gravitational growth of clustering debiases the older galaxies. The presence of random fluctuations in the sites of galaxy formation relative to the mass distribution can cause large and rapidly falling bias values at high redshift.Comment: 4 pages, with 2 figures included. Typos corrected to match published ApJL version. Color figure and links at http://www.sns.ias.edu/~max/bias.html or from [email protected]

    The cosmological light-cone effect on the power spectrum of galaxies and quasars in wide-field redshift surveys

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    We examine observational consequences of the cosmological light-cone effect on the power spectrum of the distribution of galaxies and quasars from upcoming redshift surveys. First we derive an expression for the power spectrum of cosmological objects in real space on a light cone, PR,linLC(k)P^{\rm LC}_{\rm R,lin}(k), which is exact in linear theory of density perturbations. Next we incorporate corrections for the nonlinear density evolution and redshift-space distortion in the formula in a phenomenological manner which is consistent with recent numerical simulations. On the basis of this formula, we predict the power spectrum of galaxies and quasars on the light cone for future redshift surveys taking account of the selection function properly. We demonstrate that this formula provides a reliable and useful method to compute the power spectrum on the light cone given an evolution model of bias.Comment: 18 pages, 3 figures, to be published in the Astrophysical Journa

    Nonlinear Gravitational Clustering: dreams of a paradigm

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    We discuss the late time evolution of the gravitational clustering in an expanding universe, based on the nonlinear scaling relations (NSR) which connect the nonlinear and linear two point correlation functions. The existence of critical indices for the NSR suggests that the evolution may proceed towards a universal profile which does not change its shape at late times. We begin by clarifying the relation between the density profiles of the individual halo and the slope of the correlation function and discuss the conditions under which the slopes of the correlation function at the extreme nonlinear end can be independent of the initial power spectrum. If the evolution should lead to a profile which preserves the shape at late times, then the correlation function should grow as a2a^2 [in a Ω=1\Omega=1 universe] een at nonlinear scales. We prove that such exact solutions do not exist; however, ther e exists a class of solutions (``psuedo-linear profiles'', PLP's for short) which evolve as a2a^2 to a good approximation. It turns out that the PLP's are the correlation functions which arise if the individual halos are assumed to be isothermal spheres. They are also configurations of mass in which the nonlinear effects of gravitational clustering is a minimum and hence can act as building blocks of the nonlinear universe. We discuss the implicatios of this result.Comment: 32 Pages, Submitted to Ap

    A Simple Method for Computing the Non-Linear Mass Correlation Function with Implications for Stable Clustering

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    We propose a simple and accurate method for computing analytically the mass correlation function for cold dark matter and scale-free models that fits N-body simulations over a range that extends from the linear to the strongly non-linear regime. The method, based on the dynamical evolution of the pair conservation equation, relies on a universal relation between the pair-wise velocity and the smoothed correlation function valid for high and low density models, as derived empirically from N-body simulations. An intriguing alternative relation, based on the stable-clustering hypothesis, predicts a power-law behavior of the mass correlation function that disagrees with N-body simulations but conforms well to the observed galaxy correlation function if negligible bias is assumed. The method is a useful tool for rapidly exploring a wide span of models and, at the same time, raises new questions about large scale structure formation.Comment: 10 pages, 3 figure

    Albedo and flux extinction coefficient of impure snow for diffuse shortwave radiation

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    Impurities enter a snowpack as a result of fallout of scavenging by falling snow crystals. Albedo and flux extinction coefficient of soot contaminated snowcovers were studied using a two stream approximation of the radiative transfer equation. The effect of soot was calculated by two methods: independent scattering by ice grains and impurities and average refractive index for ice grains. Both methods predict a qualitatively similar effect of soot; the albedo is decreased and the extinction coefficient is increased compared to that for pure snow in the visible region; the infrared properties are largely unaffected. Quantitatively, however, the effect of soot is more pronounced in the average refractive index method. Soot contamination provides a qualitative explanation for several snow observations

    The Shapiro Conjecture: Prompt or Delayed Collapse in the head-on collision of neutron stars?

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    We study the question of prompt vs. delayed collapse in the head-on collision of two neutron stars. We show that the prompt formation of a black hole is possible, contrary to a conjecture of Shapiro which claims that collapse is delayed until after neutrino cooling. We discuss the insight provided by Shapiro's conjecture and its limitation. An understanding of the limitation of the conjecture is provided in terms of the many time scales involved in the problem. General relativistic simulations in the Einstein theory with the full set of Einstein equations coupled to the general relativistic hydrodynamic equations are carried out in our study.Comment: 4 pages, 7 figure

    The Far-Infrared Background Correlation with CMB Lensing

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    The intervening large--scale structure distorts cosmic microwave background (CMB) anisotropies via gravitational lensing. The same large--scale structure, traced by dusty star--forming galaxies, also induces anisotropies in the far--infrared background (FIRB). We investigate the resulting inter--dependence of the FIRB and CMB with a halo model for the FIRB. In particular, we calculate the cross--correlation between the lensing potential and the FIRB. The lensing potential can be quadratically estimated from CMB temperature and/or polarization maps. We show that the cross--correlation can be measured with high signal--to--noise with data from the Planck Surveyor. We discuss how such a measurement can be used to understand the nature of FIRB sources and their relation to the distribution of dark matter.Comment: 9 pages, 5 figures, submitted to Ap

    Scaling properties of the redshift power spectrum: theoretical models

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    We report the results of an analysis of the redshift power spectrum PS(k,μ)P^S(k,\mu) in three typical Cold Dark Matter (CDM) cosmological models, where μ\mu is the cosine of the angle between the wave vector and the line-of-sight. Two distinct biased tracers derived from the primordial density peaks of Bardeen et al. and the cluster-underweight model of Jing, Mo, & B\"orner are considered in addition to the pure dark matter models. Based on a large set of high resolution simulations, we have measured the redshift power spectrum for the three tracers from the linear to the nonlinear regime. We investigate the validity of the relation - guessed from linear theory - in the nonlinear regime PS(k,μ)=PR(k)[1+βμ2]2D(k,μ,σ12(k)), P^S(k,\mu)=P^R(k)[1+\beta\mu^2]^2D(k,\mu,\sigma_{12}(k)), where PR(k)P^R(k) is the real space power spectrum, and β\beta equals Ω00.6/bl\Omega_0^{0.6}/b_l. The damping function DD which should generally depend on kk, μ\mu, and σ12(k)\sigma_{12}(k), is found to be a function of only one variable kμσ12(k)k\mu\sigma_{12}(k). This scaling behavior extends into the nonlinear regime, while DD can be accurately expressed as a Lorentz function - well known from linear theory - for values D>0.1D > 0.1. The difference between σ12(k)\sigma_{12}(k) and the pairwise velocity dispersion defined by the 3-D peculiar velocity of the simulations (taking r=1/kr=1/k) is about 15%. Therefore σ12(k)\sigma_{12}(k) is a good indicator of the pairwise velocity dispersion. The exact functional form of DD depends on the cosmological model and on the bias scheme. We have given an accurate fitting formula for the functional form of DD for the models studied.Comment: accepted for publication in ApJ;24 pages with 7 figures include

    Galaxy Groups in the SDSS DR4: II. halo occupation statistics

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    We investigate various halo occupation statistics using a large galaxy group catalogue constructed from the SDSS DR4 with an adaptive halo-based group finder. The conditional luminosity function (CLF) is measured separately for all, red and blue galaxies, as well as in terms of central and satellite galaxies. The CLFs for central and satellite galaxies can be well modelled with a log-normal distribution and a modified Schechter form, respectively. About 85% of the central galaxies and about 80% of the satellite galaxies in halos with masses M_h\ga 10^{14}\msunh are red galaxies. These numbers decrease to 50% and 40%, respectively, in halos with M_h \sim 10^{12}\msunh. For halos of a given mass, the distribution of the luminosities of central galaxies, LcL_c, has a dispersion of about 0.15 dex. The mean luminosity (stellar mass) of the central galaxies scales with halo mass as LcMh0.17L_c\propto M_h^{0.17} (M,cMh0.22M_{*,c}\propto M_h^{0.22}) for halos with masses M\gg 10^{12.5}\msunh, and both relations are significantly steeper for less massive halos. We also measure the luminosity (stellar mass) gap between the first and second brightest (most massive) member galaxies, logL1logL2\log L_1 - \log L_2 (logM,1logM,2\log M_{*,1}-\log M_{*,2}). These gap statistics, especially in halos with M_h \la 10^{14.0}\msunh, indicate that the luminosities of central galaxies are clearly distinct from those of their satellites. The fraction of fossil groups, defined as those groups with logL1logL20.8\log L_1 - \log L_2\ge 0.8, ranges from 2.5\sim 2.5% for groups with M_h\sim 10^{14}\msunh to 18-60% for groups with M_h\sim 10^{13}\msunh. Finally, we measure the fraction of satellites, which changes from 5.0\sim 5.0% for galaxies with \rmag\sim -22.0 to 40\sim40% for galaxies with \rmag\sim -17.0. (abridged)Comment: 16 pages, 11 figures. Accepted for publication in Ap
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