376 research outputs found
IRAS versus POTENT Density Fields on Large Scales: Biasing and Omega
The galaxy density field as extracted from the IRAS 1.2 Jy redshift survey is
compared to the mass density field as reconstructed by the POTENT method from
the Mark III catalog of peculiar velocities. The reconstruction is done with
Gaussian smoothing of radius 12 h^{-1}Mpc, and the comparison is carried out
within volumes of effective radii 31-46 h^{-1}Mpc, containing approximately
10-26 independent samples. Random and systematic errors are estimated from
multiple realizations of mock catalogs drawn from a simulation that mimics the
observed density field in the local universe. The relationship between the two
density fields is found to be consistent with gravitational instability theory
in the mildly nonlinear regime and a linear biasing relation between galaxies
and mass. We measure beta = Omega^{0.6}/b_I = 0.89 \pm 0.12 within a volume of
effective radius 40 h^{-1}Mpc, where b_I is the IRAS galaxy biasing parameter
at 12 h^{-1}Mpc. This result is only weakly dependent on the comparison volume,
suggesting that cosmic scatter is no greater than \pm 0.1. These data are thus
consistent with Omega=1 and b_I\approx 1. If b_I>0.75, as theoretical models of
biasing indicate, then Omega>0.33 at 95% confidence. A comparison with other
estimates of beta suggests scale-dependence in the biasing relation for IRAS
galaxies.Comment: 35 pages including 10 figures, AAS Latex, Submitted to The
Astrophysical Journa
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
Comparing Galaxies and Lyman Alpha Absorbers at Low Redshift
A scenario is explored in which Lyman alpha absorbers at low redshift arise
from lines of sight through extended galaxy disks, including those of dwarf and
low surface brightness galaxies. A population of galaxies is simulated based
upon observed distributions of galaxy properties, and the gas disks are modeled
using pressure and gravity confinement. Some parameter values are ruled out by
comparing simulation results with the observed galaxy luminosity function, and
constraints may be made on the absorbing cross sections of galaxies. Simulation
results indicate that it is difficult to match absorbers with particular
galaxies observationally since absorption typically occurs at high impact
parameters (>200 kpc) from luminous galaxies. Low impact parameter absorption
is dominated by low luminosity dwarfs. A large fraction of absorption lines is
found to originate from low surface brightness galaxies, so that the absorbing
galaxy is likely to be misidentified. Low redshift Lyman alpha absorber counts
can easily be explained by moderately extended galaxy disks when low surface
brightness galaxies are included, and it is easily possible to find a scenario
which is consistent with observed the galaxy luminosity function, with low
redshift Lyman limit absorber counts, and with standard nucleosynthesis
predictions of the baryon density, Omega_Baryon.Comment: 17 pages, 8 figures, accepted to the Astrophysical Journa
Rapid exchange of mammalian topoisomerase IIα at kinetochores and chromosome arms in mitosis
Astable cell line (GT2-LPk) derived from LLC-Pk was created in which endogenous DNA topoisomerase IIα (topoIIα) protein was downregulated and replaced by the expression of topoIIα fused with enhanced green fluorescent protein (EGFP–topoIIα). The EGFP–topoIIα faithfully mimicked the distribution of the endogenous protein in both interphase and mitosis. In early stages of mitosis, EGFP–topoIIα accumulated at kinetochores and in axial lines extending along the chromosome arms. During anaphase, EGFP–topoIIα diminished at kinetochores and increased in the cytoplasm with a portion accumulating into large circular foci that were mobile and appeared to fuse with the reforming nuclei. These cytoplasmic foci appearing at anaphase were coincident with precursor organelles of the reforming nucleolus called nucleolus-derived foci (NDF). Photobleaching of EGFP–topoIIα associated with kinetochores and chromosome arms showed that the majority of the protein rapidly exchanges (t1/2 of 16 s). Catalytic activity of topoIIα was essential for rapid dynamics, as ICRF-187, an inhibitor of topoIIα, blocked recovery after photobleaching. Although some topoIIα may be stably associated with chromosomes, these studies indicate that the majority undergoes rapid dynamic exchange. Rapid mobility of topoIIα in chromosomes may be essential to resolve strain imparted during chromosome condensation and segregation
Reconstructing the Cosmic Velocity and Tidal Fields with Galaxy Groups Selected from the Sloan Digital Sky Survey
[abridge]Cosmic velocity and tidal fields are important for the understanding
of the cosmic web and the environments of galaxies, and can also be used to
constrain cosmology. In this paper, we reconstruct these two fields in SDSS
volume from dark matter halos represented by galaxy groups. Detailed mock
catalogues are used to test the reliability of our method against uncertainties
arising from redshift distortions, survey boundaries, and false identifications
of groups by our group finder. We find that both the velocity and tidal fields,
smoothed on a scale of ~2Mpc/h, can be reliably reconstructed in the inner
region (~66%) of the survey volume. The reconstructed tidal field is used to
split the cosmic web into clusters, filaments, sheets, and voids, depending on
the sign of the eigenvalues of tidal tensor. The reconstructed velocity field
nicely shows how the flows are diverging from the centers of voids, and
converging onto clusters, while sheets and filaments have flows that are
convergent along one and two directions, respectively. We use the reconstructed
velocity field and the Zel'dovich approximation to predict the mass density
field in the SDSS volume as function of redshift, and find that the mass
distribution closely follows the galaxy distribution even on small scales. We
find a large-scale bulk flow of about 117km/s in a very large volume,
equivalent to a sphere with a radius of ~170Mpc/h, which seems to be produced
by the massive structures associated with the SDSS Great Wall. Finally, we
discuss potential applications of our reconstruction to study the environmental
effects of galaxy formation, to generate initial conditions for simulations of
the local Universe, and to constrain cosmological models. The velocity, tidal
and density fields in the SDSS volume, specified on a Cartesian grid with a
spatial resolution of ~700kpc/h, are available from the authors upon request.Comment: 35 pages, 13 figures, accepted for publication in MNRA
Environmental Enhancement of DM Haloes
We study the properties of dark matter haloes of a LCDM model in different
environments. Using the distance of the 5th nearest neighbour as an
environmental density indicator, we show that haloes in a high density
environment are more massive, richer, have larger radii and larger velocity
dispersions than haloes in a low density environment. Haloes in high density
regions move with larger velocities, and are more spherical than haloes in low
density regions. In addition, low mass haloes in the vicinity of the most
massive haloes are themselves more massive, larger, and have larger rms
velocities and larger 3D velocities than low mass haloes far from massive
haloes. The velocities of low mass haloes near massive haloes increase with the
parent halo mass. Our results are in agreement with recent findings about
environmental effects for groups and clusters of galaxies from deep (SDSS and
LCRS) surveys.Comment: 9 pages, 7 figures, submitted for Astronomy and Astrophysic
Understanding the shape of the halo-mass and galaxy-mass cross-correlation functions
We use the Millennium Simulation to measure the cross-correlation between
halo centres and mass (or equivalently the average density profiles of dark
haloes) in a LCDM cosmology. We present results for radii in the range 10 kpc/h
< r < 30 Mpc/h for halo masses in the range 4e10 Msol/h < M200 < 4e14 Msol/h.
Both at z=0 and at z=0.76 these cross-correlations are surprisingly well fit by
approximating the inner region by a density profile of NFW or Einasto form, the
outer region by a biased version of the linear mass autocorrelation function,
and by adopting the maximum of the two where they are comparable. We use a
simulation of the formation of galaxies within the Millennium Simulation to
explore how these results are reflected in cross-correlations between galaxies
and mass. These are directly observable through galaxy-galaxy lensing. Here
also we find that simple models can represent the simulation results remarkably
well, typically to < 10%. Such models can be used to extend our results to
other redshifts, to cosmologies with other parameters, and to other assumptions
about how galaxies populate dark haloes. The characteristic features predicted
in the galaxy-galaxy lensing signal should provide a strong test of the LCDM
cosmology as well as a route to understanding how galaxies form within it.Comment: 14 pages, 15 figures submitted to MNRAS, replaced incorrect figure
fil
Weak Lensing by Galaxies in Groups and Clusters: I.--Theoretical Expectations
Galaxy-galaxy lensing is rapidly becoming one of the most promising means to
accurately measure the average relation between galaxy properties and halo
mass. In order to obtain a signal of sufficient signal-to-noise, one needs to
stack many lens galaxies according to their property of interest, such as
luminosity or stellar mass. Since such a stack consists of both central and
satellite galaxies, which contribute very different lensing signals, the
resulting shear measurements can be difficult to interpret. In the past,
galaxy-galaxy lensing studies have either completely ignored this problem, have
applied rough isolation criteria in an attempt to preferentially select
`central' galaxies, or have tried to model the contribution of satellites
explicitely. However, if one is able to {\it a priori} split the galaxy
population in central and satellite galaxies, one can measure their lensing
signals separately. This not only allows a much cleaner measurement of the
relation between halo mass and their galaxy populations, but also allows a
direct measurement of the sub-halo masses around satellite galaxies. In this
paper, we use a realistic mock galaxy redshift survey to show that galaxy
groups, properly selected from large galaxy surveys, can be used to accurately
split the galaxy population in centrals and satellites. Stacking the resulting
centrals according to their group mass, estimated from the total group
luminosity, allows a remarkably accurate recovery of the masses and density
profiles of their host haloes. In addition, stacking the corresponding
satellite galaxies according to their projected distance from the group center
yields a lensing signal that can be used to accurate measure the masses of both
sub-haloes and host haloes. (Abridged)Comment: 16 pages, 10 figures, Accepted for publication in MNRA
The Local Group as a test of cosmological models
The dynamics of the Local Group and its environment provide a unique
challenge to cosmological models. The velocity field within 5h-1 Mpc of the
Local Group (LG) is extremely ``cold''. The deviation from a pure Hubble flow,
characterized by the observed radial peculiar velocity dispersion, is measured
to be about 60km/s. We compare the local velocity field with similarly defined
regions extracted from N-body simulations of Universes dominated by cold dark
matter (CDM). This test is able to strongly discriminate between models that
have different mean mass densities. We find that neither the Omega=1 (SCDM) nor
Omega=0.3 (OCDM) cold dark matter models can produce a single candidate Local
Group that is embedded in a region with such small peculiar velocities. For
these models, we measure velocity dispersions between 500-700km/s and
150-300km/s respectively, more than twice the observed value. Although both CDM
models fail to produce environments similar to those of our Local Group on a
scale of a few Mpc, they can give rise to many binary systems that have similar
orbital properties as the Milky Way--Andromeda system. The local,
gravitationally induced bias of halos in the CDM ``Local Group'' environment,
if defined within a sphere of 10 Mpc around each Local Group is about 1.5,
independent of Omega. No biasing scheme could reconcile the measured velocity
dispersions around Local Groups with the observed one. Identification of binary
systems using a halo finder (named Skid
(http://www-hpcc.astro.washington.edu/tools/DENMAX for a public version)) based
on local density maxima instead of a simple linking algorithm, gives a much
more complete sample. We show that a standard ``friend of friends'' algorithm
would miss 40% of the LG candidates present in the simulations.Comment: Latex file (19 pages) + 13 figures. Submitted to New Astronomy. Two
MPEG movies were not included. Also available (this time with the movies) at
http://www-hpcc.astro.washington.edu/faculty/fabio/index.htm
GaBoDS: The Garching-Bonn Deep Survey: VII. Probing galaxy bias using weak gravitational lensing
[ABRIDGED] The weak gravitational lensing effect is used to infer matter
density fluctuations within the field-of-view of the Garching-Bonn Deep Survey
(GaBoDS). This information is employed for a statistical comparison of the
galaxy distribution to the total matter distribution. The result of this
comparison is expressed by means of the linear bias factor, b, the ratio of
density fluctuations, and the correlation factor between density
fluctuations. The total galaxy sample is divided into three sub-samples using
R-band magnitudes and the weak lensing analysis is applied separately for each
sub-sample. Together with the photometric redshifts from the related COMBO-17
survey we estimate the typical mean redshifts of these samples with
, respectively. For all three samples, a slight
galaxy anti-bias, b~0.8+-0.1, on scales of a few Mpc/h is found; the bias
factor shows evidence for a slight scale-dependence. The correlation between
galaxy and (dark) matter distribution is high, r~0.6+-0.2, indicating a
non-linear or/and stochastic biasing relation between matter and galaxies.
Between the three samples no significant evolution with redshift is found.Comment: 22 pages, 11 figures, LaTeX, accepted by A&A; estimates for the
uncertainties in the galaxy redshift distribution were added, new Section 4.4
on statistical errors in the galaxy bias calibration factor
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