108 research outputs found
Towards breaking the Omega-bias degeneracy in density--velocity comparisons
I derive a second-order local relation between the REDSHIFT-space mass
density field and the REAL-space velocity field. This relation can be useful
for comparisons between the cosmic density and peculiar velocity fields, for a
number of reasons. First, relating the real-space velocity directly to the
redshift-space density enables one to avoid the Omega-dependent reconstruction
of the density field in real space. Secondly, the reconstruction of the
three-dimensional velocity field in redshift space, questionable because of its
vorticity, is also unnecessary. Finally, a similar relation between the GALAXY
density field and the velocity field offers a way to break the Omega-bias
degeneracy in density--velocity comparisons, when combined with an additional
measurement of the redshift-space galaxy skewness. I derive the latter relation
under the assumption of nonlinear but local bias; accounting for stochasticity
of bias is left for further study.Comment: 13 pages, no figures, uses mn.sty. The calculation properly redone
for bias in real space, added references. Accepted by MNRA
What X-ray source counts can tell about large-scale matter distribution
Sources generating most of the X-ray background (XRB) are dispersed over a
wide range of redshifts. Thus, statistical characteristics of the source
distribution carry information on matter distribution on very large scales. We
test the possibility of detecting the variation in the X-ray source number
counts over the celestial sphere. A large number of Chandra pointings spread
over both galactic hemispheres are investigated. We searched for all the
point-like sources in the soft band of 0.5 - 2 keV and statistically assessed
the population of sources below the detection threshold. A homogeneous sample
of the number counts at fluxes above ~10^{-15} erg s^{-1} cm^{-2} was
constructed for more than 300 ACIS fields. The sources were counted within a
circular area of 15 arcmin diameter. The count correlations between overlapping
fields were used to assess the accuracy of the computational methods used in
the analysis. The average number of sources in the investigated sample amounts
to 46 per field. It is shown that the source number counts vary between fields
at a level exceeding the fluctuation amplitude expected for the random
(Poissonian) distribution. The excess fluctuations are attributed to the cosmic
variance generated by the large-scale structures. The rms variations of the
source counts due to the cosmic variance within the 15$ arcmin circle reach 8%
of the average number counts. An amplitude of the potential correlations of the
source counts on angular scales larger than the size of a single pointing
remains below the noise level.Comment: 8 pages, 4 figures; expansion of observational material resulted in
substantial changes; accepted for publication in A&
The velocity-density relation in the spherical model
We study the cosmic velocity-density relation using the spherical collapse
model (SCM) as a proxy to non-linear dynamics. Although the dependence of this
relation on cosmological parameters is known to be weak, we retain the density
parameter Omega_m in SCM equations, in order to study the limit Omega_m -> 0.
We show that in this regime the considered relation is strictly linear, for
arbitrary values of the density contrast, on the contrary to some claims in the
literature. On the other hand, we confirm that for realistic values of Omega_m
the exact relation in the SCM is well approximated by the classic formula of
Bernardeau (1992), both for voids (delta<0) and for overdensities up to delta ~
3. Inspired by this fact, we find further analytic approximations to the
relation for the whole range delta from -1 to infinity. Our formula for voids
accounts for the weak Omega_m-dependence of their maximal rate of expansion,
which for Omega_m < 1 is slightly smaller that 3/2. For positive density
contrasts, we find a simple relation div v = 3 H_0 (Omega_m)^(0.6) [
(1+delta)^(1/6) - (1+delta)^(1/2) ], that works very well up to the turn-around
(i.e. up to delta ~ 13.5 for Omega_m = 0.25 and neglected Omega_Lambda). Having
the same second-order expansion as the formula of Bernardeau, it can be
regarded as an extension of the latter for higher density contrasts. Moreover,
it gives a better fit to results of cosmological numerical simulations.Comment: 11 pages, 6 figures. Accepted for publication in MNRA
Is space really expanding? A counterexample
In all Friedman models, the cosmological redshift is widely interpreted as a
consequence of the general-relativistic phenomenon of EXPANSION OF SPACE. Other
commonly believed consequences of this phenomenon are superluminal recession
velocities of distant galaxies and the distance to the particle horizon greater
than c*t (where t is the age of the Universe), in apparent conflict with
special relativity. Here, we study a particular Friedman model: empty universe.
This model exhibits both cosmological redshift, superluminal velocities and
infinite distance to the horizon. However, we show that the cosmological
redshift is there simply a relativistic Doppler shift. Moreover, apparently
superluminal velocities and `acausal' distance to the horizon are in fact a
direct consequence of special-relativistic phenomenon of time dilation, as well
as of the adopted definition of distance in cosmology. There is no conflict
with special relativity, whatsoever. In particular, INERTIAL recession
velocities are subluminal. Since in the real Universe, sufficiently distant
galaxies recede with relativistic velocities, these special-relativistic
effects must be at least partly responsible for the cosmological redshift and
the aforementioned `superluminalities', commonly attributed to the expansion of
space. Let us finish with a question resembling a Buddhism-Zen `koan': in an
empty universe, what is expanding?Comment: 12 pages, no figures; added Appendix with a calculation of the
cosmological redshift in `private space
Stochastic Biasing and Galaxy-Mass Density Relation in the Weakly Non-linear Regime
It is believed that the biasing of the galaxies plays an important role for
understanding the large-scale structure of the universe. In general, the
biasing of galaxy formation could be stochastic. Furthermore, the future galaxy
survey might allow us to explore the time evolution of the galaxy distribution.
In this paper, the analytic study of the galaxy-mass density relation and its
time evolution is presented within the framework of the stochastic biasing. In
the weakly non-linear regime, we derive a general formula for the galaxy-mass
density relation as a conditional mean using the Edgeworth expansion. The
resulting expression contains the joint moments of the total mass and galaxy
distributions. Using the perturbation theory, we investigate the time evolution
of the joint moments and examine the influence of the initial stochasticity on
the galaxy-mass density relation. The analysis shows that the galaxy-mass
density relation could be well-approximated by the linear relation. Compared
with the skewness of the galaxy distribution, we find that the estimation of
the higher order moments using the conditional mean could be affected by the
stochasticity. Therefore, the galaxy-mass density relation as a conditional
mean should be used with a caution as a tool for estimating the skewness and
the kurtosis.Comment: 22 pages, 7 Encapusulated Postscript Figures, aastex, The title and
the structure of the paper has been changed, Results and conclusions
unchanged, Accepted for publication in Ap
Nonlinearity and stochasticity in the density--velocity relation
We present results of the investigations of the statistical properties of a
joint density and velocity divergence probability distribution function (PDF)
in the mildly non-linear regime. For that purpose we use both perturbation
theory results, extended here for a top-hat filter, and numerical simulations.
In particular we derive the quantitative (complete as possible up to third
order terms) and qualitative predictions for constrained averages and
constrained dispersions -- which describe the nonlinearities and the
stochasticity properties beyond the linear regime -- and compare them against
numerical simulations. We find overall a good agreement for constrained
averages; however, the agreement for constrained dispersions is only
qualitative. Scaling relations for the Omega-dependence of these quantities are
satisfactory reproduced.
Guided by our analytical and numerical results, we finally construct a robust
phenomenological description of the joint PDF in a closed analytic form. The
good agreement of our formula with results of N-body simulations for a number
of cosmological parameters provides a sound validation of the presented
approach.
Our results provide a basis for a potentially powerful tool with which it is
possible to analyze galaxy survey data in order to test the gravitational
instability paradigm beyond the linear regime and put useful constraints on
cosmological parameters. In particular we show how the nonlinearity in the
density--velocity relation can be used to break the so-called Omega-bias
degeneracy in cosmic density-velocity comparisons.Comment: 12 pages, 11 figures; revised version with minor changes in the
presentation, accepted for publication in MNRA
Using Perturbative Least Action to Reconstruct Redshift Space Distortions
In this paper, we present a redshift space reconstruction scheme which is
analogous to and extends the Perturbative Least Action (PLA) method described
by Goldberg & Spergel (2000). We first show that this scheme is effective in
reconstructing even nonlinear observations. We then suggest that by varying the
cosmology to minimize the quadrupole moment of a reconstructed density field,
it may be possible to lower the errorbars on the redshift distortion parameter,
as well as to break the degeneracy between the linear bias parameter,
, and . Finally, we discuss how PLA might be applied to realistic
redshift surveys.Comment: 34 Pages LaTeX, including 10 postscript figures. Submitted to
Astrophysical Journa
- …