7,840 research outputs found
Analytic model for galaxy and dark matter clustering
We investigate an analytic model to compute nonlinear power spectrum of dark
matter, galaxies and their cross-correlation. The model is based on
Press-Schechter halos, which cluster and have realistic dark matter profiles.
The total power spectrum is a sum of two contributions, one from correlations
betwen the halos and one from correlations within the same halo. We show that
such a model can give dark matter power spectra which match well with the
results of N-body simulations, provided that concentration parameter decreases
with the halo mass.
Galaxy power spectrum differs from dark matter power spectrum because pair
weighted number of galaxies increases less rapidly than the halo mass, as
predicted by theoretical models and observed in clusters. In this case the
resulting power spectrum becomes a power law with the slope closed to the
observed. Such a model also predicts a later onset of nonlinear clustering
compared to the dark matter, which is needed to reconcile the CDM models with
the data. Generic prediction of this model is that bias is scale dependent and
nonmonotonic. For red or elliptical galaxies bias in power spectrum may be
scale dependent even on very large scales.
Our predictions for galaxy-dark matter correlations, which can be observed
through the galaxy-galaxy lensing, show that these cannot be interpreted simply
as an average halo profile of a typical galaxy, because different halo masses
dominate at different scales and because larger halos host more than one
galaxy. We discuss the prospects of using cross-correlations in combination
with galaxy clustering to determine the dark matter power spectrum (ABRIDGED).Comment: 16 pages, 7 figures, submitted to Phys. Rev.
Gravitational vacuum energy in our recently accelerating universe
We review current observations of the homogeneous cosmological expansion
which, because they measure only kinematic variables, cannot determine the
dynamics driving the recent accelerated expansion. The minimal fit to the data,
the flat model, consisting of cold dark matter and a cosmological
constant, interprets geometrically as a classical spacetime
curvature constant of nature, avoiding any reference to quantum vacuum energy.
(The observed Uehling and Casimir effects measure forces due to QED vacuum
polarization, but not any quantum material vacuum energies.) An Extended
Anthropic Principle, that Dark Energy and Dark Gravity be indistinguishable,
selects out flat . Prospective cosmic shear and galaxy clustering
observations of the growth of fluctuations are intended to test whether the
'dark energy' driving the recent cosmological acceleration is static or
moderately dynamic. Even if dynamic, observational differences between an
additional negative-pressure material component within general relativity (Dark
Energy) and low-curvature modifications of general relativity (Dark Gravity)
will be extremely small.Comment: 3 pages, from Proceedings of the Casimir Workshop, to be published by
IOP in Journal of Physics Conference Serie
Isotropy in the two-point angular correlation function of the CMB
We study the directional dependence of the angular two-point correlation
function in maps of the cosmic microwave background (CMB). We propose two new
statistics, one which measures the correlation of each point in the sky with a
ring of points separated angle theta away, and a second that measures the
missing angular correlation above 60 degrees as a function of direction. Using
these statistics, we find that most of the low power in cut-sky maps measured
by the WMAP experiment comes from unusually low contributions from the
directions of the lobes of the quadrupole and the octupole. These findings may
aid a future explanation of why the CMB exhibits low power at large angular
scales.Comment: 9 pages; adjusted format, edited captions, and added reference
Financing Marine Conservation: A Menu of Options
This guide describes over 30 mechanisms for financing the conservation of marine biodiversity, both within and outside of MPAs. Its main purpose is to familiarize conservation professionals i.e., the managers and staff of government conservation agencies, international donors, and nongovernmental organizations (NGOs) with a menu of options for financing the conservation of marine and coastal biodiversity. A number of economic incentive mechanisms for marine conservation (as contrasted with revenue-raising mechanisms) are also presented in section 5 (on Real Estate and Development Rights) and section 6 (on Fishing Industry Revenues). Each section provides a description of the financing mechanism and examples showing how the mechanism has been used to finance marine conservation. In some cases, even though a mechanism may have only been used to finance terrestrial conservation, it has been included in this guide because of its potential to also serve as a new source of funding for marine conservation. This guide is not intended to provide detailed instructions on how to establish and implement each of the different conservation financing mechanisms. Instead references are provided at the end of each section for sources of additional information about each of the mechanisms described. Citations to specific references are also included in the text in parentheses
Ultra-Light Dark Matter in Ultra-Faint Dwarf Galaxies
Cold Dark Matter (CDM) models struggle to match the observations at galactic
scales. The tension can be reduced either by dramatic baryonic feedback effects
or by modifying the particle physics of CDM. Here, we consider an ultra-light
scalar field DM particle manifesting a wave nature below a DM particle
mass-dependent Jeans scale. For DM mass , this scenario
delays galaxy formation and avoids cusps in the center of the dark matter
haloes. We use new measurements of half-light mass in ultra-faint dwarf
galaxies Draco II and Triangulum II to estimate the mass of the DM particle in
this model. We find that if the stellar populations are within the core of the
density profile then the data are in agreement with a wave dark matter model
having a DM particle with . The presence
of this extremely light particle will contribute to the formation of a central
solitonic core replacing the cusp of a Navarro-Frenk-White profile and bringing
predictions closer to observations of cored central density in dwarf galaxies.Comment: matching version accepted by MNRA
Dark Matter Debris Flows in the Milky Way
We show that subhalos falling into the Milky Way create a flow of
tidally-stripped debris particles near the galactic center with characteristic
velocity behavior. In the Via Lactea-II N-body simulation, this unvirialized
component constitutes a few percent of the local density and has velocities
peaked at 340 km/s in the solar neighborhood. Such velocity substructure has
important implications for surveys of low-metallicity stars, as well as direct
detection experiments sensitive to dark matter with large scattering
thresholds.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figures; v2 includes new plots illustrating the radial and
tangential velocities of non-debris particles; v3 includes some additional
minor edit
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