3,438 research outputs found
Magnetogenesis from isocurvature initial conditions
The generation of magnetic fields is a natural consequence of the existence
of vortical currents in the pre-recombination era. This has been confirmed in
detail for the case of adiabatic initial conditions, using second-order
Boltzmann solvers, but has not been fully explored in the presence of
isocurvatures. In this work, we use a modified version of the second-order
Boltzmann code SONG to compute the magnetic field generated by vortical
currents for general initial conditions. A mild enhancement of the generated
magnetic field is found in the presence of general isocurvature modes, when
compared to the adiabatic case. A particularly interesting case is that of the
compensated isocurvature mode, for which the enhancement increases by several
orders of magnitude due to the observationally allowed large amplitude of those
modes. We show in this particular case how these compensated modes can
influence observables at second order, such as the magnetic fields, and produce
interesting effects which may be used to constrain these modes in the future.Comment: 22 pages. Minor corrections. Matches version published in JCA
A simplified structure for the second order cosmological perturbation equations
Increasingly accurate observations of the cosmic microwave background and the
large scale distribution of galaxies necessitate the study of nonlinear
perturbations of Friedmann-Lemaitre cosmologies, whose equations are
notoriously complicated. In this paper we present a new derivation of the
governing equations for second order perturbations within the framework of the
metric-based approach that is minimal, as regards amount of calculation and
length of expressions, and flexible, as regards choice of gauge and
stress-energy tensor. Because of their generality and the simplicity of their
structure our equations provide a convenient starting point for determining the
behaviour of nonlinear perturbations of FL cosmologies with any given
stress-energy content, using either the Poisson gauge or the uniform curvature
gauge.Comment: 30 pages, no figures. Changed title to the one in published version
and some minor changes and addition
Cosmology on all scales: A two-parameter perturbation expansion
S.R.G., K.A.M. and T.C. acknowledge support from the STF
Galaxy number counts at second order: an independent approach
Next generation surveys will be capable of determining cosmological parameters beyond percent level. To match this precision, theoretical descriptions should look beyond the linear perturbations to approximate the observables in large scale structure. A quantity of interest is the Number density of galaxies detected by our instruments. This has been focus of interest recently, and several efforts have been made to explain relativistic effects theoretically, thereby testing the full theory. However, the results at nonlinear level from previous works are in disagreement. We present a new and independent approach to computing the relativistic galaxy number counts to second order in cosmological perturbation theory. We derive analytical expressions for the full second order relativistic observed redshift, for the angular diameter distance and for the volume spanned by a survey. Finally, we compare our results with previous works which compute the general distance-redshift relation, finding that our result is in agreement at linear order
New mechanism for primordial black hole formation during reheating
In the scalar field dark matter model virialized halos present condensed central cores called boson stars. Considering the equivalent process during reheating, we look at the formation of primordial black holes (PBHs) through the gravitational collapse of structures virialized in this era. We present the criteria necessary for collapse of either the whole structure, or that of the central core, in terms of the threshold amplitude for the primordial density contrast. This is computed for both the free and the self-interacting scalar fields. We discuss the relevance of our results for the abundance of PBHs
Diagnosis of 3D magnetic field and modes composition in MHD turbulence with Y-parameter
Magnetic fields are crucial in numerous astrophysical processes within the
interstellar medium. However, the detailed determination of magnetic field
geometry is notoriously challenging. Based on the modern magnetohydrodynamic
(MHD) turbulence theory, we introduce a novel statistical technique, the
"Y-parameter", to decipher the magnetic field inclination in the ISM and
identify dominant turbulence modes. The Y-parameter, calculated as the ratio of
anisotropies of different Stokes parameter combinations, displays contrasting
trends with the mean-field inclination angle in Alfv\'enic and compressible
turbulence modes. A Y-parameter value around provide a statistical
boundary to determine the dominant MHD turbulence modes. We have discovered
specific correlations between the Y-parameter value and the inclination angle
that unveil the dominant turbulence mode. This methodology, when applied to
future radio polarisation surveys such as LOFAR and SKA, promises to
significantly enhance our knowledge of 3D magnetic field in the ISM and improve
our understanding of interstellar turbulence.Comment: 13 pages, 10 figures, 1 table, Accepted for publication in MNRA
Viable Gauge Choices in Cosmologies with Non-Linear Structures
A variety of gauges are used in cosmological perturbation theory. These are often chosen in order to attribute physical properties to a particular choice of coordinates, or otherwise to simplify the form of the resultant equations. Calculations are then performed with the understanding that they could have been done in any gauge, and that transformations between different gauges can be made at will. We show that this logic can be extended to the domain of large density contrasts, where different types of perturbative expansion are required, but that the way in which gauges can be chosen in the presence of such structures is severely constrained. In particular, most gauges that are commonly considered in the cosmology literature are found to be unviable in the presence of non-linear structures. This includes spatially flat gauge, synchronous gauge, comoving orthogonal gauge, total matter gauge, N-body gauge, and the uniform density gauge. In contrast, we find that the longitudinal gauge and the Newtonian motion gauge are both viable choices in both standard cosmological perturbation theory, and in the post-Newtonian perturbative expansions that are required in order to model non-linear structures
Second-order cosmological perturbation theory and initial conditions for N-body simulations
We use gauge-invariant cosmological perturbation theory to calculate the
displacement field that sets the initial conditions for -body simulations.
Using first and second-order fully relativistic perturbation theory in the
synchronous-comoving gauge, allows us to go beyond the Newtonian predictions
and to calculate relativistic corrections to it. We use an Einstein--de Sitter
model, including both growing and decaying modes in our solutions. The impact
of our results should be assessed through the implementation of the featured
displacement in cosmological -body simulations.Comment: V2: Second order density added and other expressions simplified.
References updated. 15 page
Case Reports: Peritoneal hydatidosis in a young girl
We report a case of peritoneal hydatidosis that occurred post laparotomy. Patient was diagnosed nine months after she had laparotomy for suspected acute appendicitis. The whole peritoneal cavity was studded with cysts. In view of diffuse involvement, patient was managed conservatively and showed response to medical therapy
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