36 research outputs found
Overconstrained dynamics in galaxy redshift surveys
The least-action principle (LAP) method is used on four galaxy redshift
surveys to measure the density parameter Omega_m and the matter and
galaxy-galaxy power spectra. The datasets are PSCz, ORS, Mark III and SFI. The
LAP method is applied on the surveys simultaneously, resulting in an
overconstrained dynamical system that describes the cosmic overdensities and
velocity flows. The system is solved by relaxing the constraint that each
survey imposes upon the cosmic fields. A least-squares optimization of the
errors that arise in the process yields the cosmic fields and the value of
Omega_m that is the best fit to the ensemble of datasets. The analysis has been
carried out with a high-resolution Gaussian smoothing of 500 km/s and over a
spherical selected volume of radius 9,000 km/s. We have assigned a weight to
each survey, depending on their density of sampling, and this parameter
determines their relative influence in limiting the domain of the overall
solution. The influence of each survey on the final value of Omega_m, the
cosmographical features of the cosmic fields and the power spectra largely
depends on the distribution function of the errors in the relaxation of the
constraints. We find that PSCz and Mark III are closer to the final solution
than ORS and SFI. The likelihood analysis yields Omega_m= 0.37\pm 0.01 to
1sigma level. PSCz and SFI are the closest to this value, whereas ORS and Mark
III predict a somewhat lower Omega_m. The model of bias employed is a
scale-dependent one, and we retain up to 42 bias coefficients b_{rl} in the
spherical harmonics formalism. The predicted power spectra are estimated in the
range of wavenumbers 0.02-0.49h Mpc^{-1}, and we compare these results with
measurements recently reported in the literature.Comment: 10 pages, no figure
Anisotropic Hubble expansion of large scale structures
We investigate the dynamics of an homogenous distribution of galaxies moving
under the cosmological expansion through Euler-Poisson equations system. The
solutions are interpreted with the aim of understanding the cosmic velocity
fields in the Local Super Cluster, and in particular the presence of a bulk
flow. Among several solutions, we shows a planar kinematics with constant
(eternal) and rotational distortion, the velocity field is not potential
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
Extended Inflation with an Exponential Potential
In this paper we investigate extended inflation with an exponential potential
, which provides a simple cosmological
scenario where the distribution of the constants of Nature is mostly determined
by . In particular, we show that this theory predicts a uniform
distribution for the Planck mass at the end of inflation, for the entire
ensemble of universes that undergo stochastic inflation. Eternal inflation
takes place in this scenario for a broad family of initial conditions, all of
which lead up to the same value of the Planck mass at the end of inflation. The
predicted value of the Planck mass is consistent with the observed value within
a comfortable range of values of the parameters involved.Comment: 6 pages, 2 figure
Recovering the Primordial Density Fluctuations: A comparison of methods
We present a comparative study of six different methods for reversing the
gravitational evolution of a cosmological density field to recover the
primordial fluctuations: linear theory, the Gaussianization mapping scheme, two
different quasi-linear dynamical schemes based on the Zel'dovich approximation,
a Hybrid dynamical-Gaussianization method and the Path Interchange Zel'dovich
Approximation (PIZA). The final evolved density field from an N-body simulation
constitutes our test case. We use a variety of statistical measures to compare
the initial density field recovered from it to the true initial density field,
using each of the six different schemes. These include point-by-point
comparisons of the density fields in real space, the individual modes in
Fourier space, as well as global statistical properties such as the genus, the
PDF of the density, and the distribution of peak heights and their shapes. We
find linear theory to be the most inaccurate of all the schemes. The
Gaussianization scheme is the least accurate after linear theory. The two
quasi-linear dynamical schemes are more accurate than Gaussianization, although
they break down quite drastically when used outside their range of validity -
the quasi-linear regime. The complementary beneficial aspects of the dynamical
and the Gaussianization schemes are combined in the Hybrid method. We find this
Hybrid scheme to be more accurate and robust than either Gaussianization or the
dynamical method alone. The PIZA scheme performs substantially better than the
others in all point-by-point comparisons. However, it produces an oversmoothed
initial density field, with a smaller number of peaks than expected, but
recovers the PDF of the initial density with impressive accuracy on scales as
small as 3Mpc/h.Comment: 39 pages, including 13 Figures, submitted to Ap
Constraints on Inflation in Einstein-Brans-Dicke Frame
The density perturbation during inflation seeds the large scale structure. We
consider both new inflation-type and chaotic inflation-type potentials in the
framework of Einstein-Brans-Dicke gravity. The density perturbation gives
strong constraints on the parameters in these potentials. For both potentials,
the constraints are not much different from those obtained in the original
inflationary models by using of Einstein gravity.Comment: 6 pages, Revtex file, typos adde
Galaxy Distances in the Nearby Universe: Corrections For Peculiar Motions
By correcting the redshift--dependent distances for peculiar motions through
a number of peculiar velocity field models, we recover the true distances of a
wide, all-sky sample of nearby galaxies (~ 6400 galaxies with velocities
cz<5500 km/s), which is complete up to the blue magnitude B=14 mag. Relying on
catalogs of galaxy groups, we treat ~2700 objects as members of galaxy groups
and the remaining objects as field galaxies.
We model the peculiar velocity field using: i) a cluster dipole
reconstruction scheme; ii) a multi--attractor model fitted to the Mark II and
Mark III catalogs of galaxy peculiar velocities. According to Mark III data the
Great Attractor has a smaller influence on local dynamics than previously
believed, whereas the Perseus-Pisces and Shapley superclusters acquire a
specific dynamical role. Remarkably, the Shapley structure, which is found to
account for nearly half the peculiar motion of the Local Group, is placed by
Mark III data closer to the zone of avoidance with respect to its optical
position.
Our multi--attractor model based on Mark III data favors a cosmological
density parameter Omega ~ 0.5 (irrespective of a biasing factor of order
unity). Differences among distance estimates are less pronounced in the ~ 2000
- 4000 km/s distance range than at larger or smaller distances. In the last
regions these differences have a serious impact on the 3D maps of the galaxy
distribution and on the local galaxy density --- on small scales.Comment: 24 pages including (9 eps figures and 7 tables). Figures 1,2,3,4 are
available only upon request. Accepted by Ap
Locally Biased Galaxy Formation and Large Scale Structure
We examine the influence of the morphology-density(MD) relation and a wide
range of simple models for biased galaxy formation on statistical measures of
large scale structure. We contrast the behavior of local biasing models, in
which the efficiency of galaxy formation is determined by density, geometry, or
velocity dispersion of the local mass distribution, with that of non-local
biasing models, in which galaxy formation is modulated coherently over scales
larger than the galaxy correlation length. If morphological segregation of
galaxies is governed by a local MD relation, then the correlation function of
E/S0 galaxies should be steeper and stronger than that of spiral galaxies on
small scales, as observed, while on large scales the correlation functions of
E/S0 and spiral galaxies should have the same shape but different amplitudes.
Similarly, all of our local bias models produce scale-independent amplification
of the correlation function and power spectrum in the linear and mildly
non-linear regimes; only a non-local biasing mechanism can alter the shape of
the power spectrum on large scales. Moments of the biased galaxy distribution
retain the hierarchical pattern of the mass moments, but biasing alters the
values and scale-dependence of the hierarchical amplitudes S3 and S4.
Pair-weighted moments of the galaxy velocity distribution are sensitive to the
details of the biasing prescription. The non-linearity of the relation between
galaxy density and mass density depends on the biasing prescription and the
smoothing scale, and the scatter in this relation is a useful diagnostic of the
physical parameters that determine the bias. Although the sensitivity of galaxy
clustering statistics to the details of biasing is an obstacle to testing
cosmological models, it is an asset for testing galaxy formation theories.Comment: 47 pages including 17 Figures, submitted to Ap
Bianchi Type I Cosmologies in Arbitrary Dimensional Dilaton Gravities
We study the low energy string effective action with an exponential type
dilaton potential and vanishing torsion in a Bianchi type I space-time
geometry. In the Einstein and string frames the general solution of the
gravitational field equations can be expressed in an exact parametric form.
Depending on the values of some parameters the obtained cosmological models can
be generically divided into three classes, leading to both singular and
nonsingular behaviors. The effect of the potential on the time evolution of the
mean anisotropy parameter is also considered in detail, and it is shown that a
Bianchi type I Universe isotropizes only in the presence of a dilaton field
potential or a central deficit charge.Comment: REVTEX, 10 pages, 8 figure