71 research outputs found
Non-Gaussianity of the density distribution in accelerating universes
According to recent observations, the existence of the dark energy has been
considered. Even though we have obtained the constraint of the equation of the
state for dark energy () as by combining WMAP
data with other astronomical data, in order to pin down , it is necessary to
use other independent observational tools. For this purpose, we consider the
dependence of the non-Gaussianity of the density distribution generated by
nonlinear dynamics. To extract the non-Gaussianity, we follow a semi-analytic
approach based on Lagrangian linear perturbation theory, which provides an
accurate value for the quasi-nonlinear region. From our results, the difference
of the non-Gaussianity between and is about 4% while that
between and is about . For the highly non-linear
region, we estimate the difference by combining this perturbative approach with
N-body simulation executed for our previous paper. From this, we can expect the
difference to be more enhanced in the low- region, which suggests that the
non-Gaussianity of the density distribution potentially plays an important role
for extracting the information of dark energy.Comment: 15 pages, 4 figures, accepted for publication in JCAP; v2: smoothing
scale has been change
The non-perturbative regime of cosmic structure formation
This paper focusses on the barely understood gap between the weakly nonlinear
regime of structure formation and the onset of the virialized regime. While the
former is accessed through perturbative calculations and the latter through
virialization conditions incorporating dynamical stresses that arise in
collisionless self-gravitating systems due to velocity dispersion forces, the
addressed regime can only be understood through non-perturbative models. We
here present an exact Lagrangian integral that provides a tool to access this
regime. We derive a transport equation for the peculiar-gravitational field
strength and integrate it along comoving trajectories of fluid elements. The
so-obtained integral provides an exact expression that solves the longitudinal
gravitational field equation in general. We argue that this integral provides a
powerful approximation beyond the Lagrangian perturbative regime, and discuss
its relation to known approximations, among them Lagrangian perturbation
solutions including the Zel'dovich approximation and approximations for
adhesive gravitational clustering, including the adhesion approximation.
Furthermore, we propose an iteration scheme for a systematic analytical and
numerical construction of trajectory fields. The integral may also be employed
to improve inverse reconstruction techniques.Comment: 9 pages; matches published version in Astron. Astrophy
Improving the Lagrangian perturbative solution for cosmic fluid: Applying Shanks transformation
We study the behavior of Lagrangian perturbative solutions. For a spherical
void model, the higher order the Lagrangian perturbation we consider, the worse
the approximation becomes in late-time evolution. In particular, if we stop to
improve until an even order is reached, the perturbative solution describes the
contraction of the void. To solve this problem, we consider improving the
perturbative solution using Shanks transformation, which accelerates the
convergence of the sequence. After the transformation, we find that the
accuracy of higher-order perturbation is recovered and the perturbative
solution is refined well. Then we show that this improvement method can apply
for a CDM model and improved the power spectrum of the density field.Comment: 17 pages, 7 figures; accepted for publication in Phys.Rev.D; v2:
Evolution of power spectrum in LCDM model is added; v3: References are
correcte
Transients from initial conditions based on Lagrangian perturbation theory in N-body simulations
We explore the initial conditions for cosmological N-body simulations
suitable for calculating the skewness and kurtosis of the density field. In
general, the initial conditions based on the perturbation theory (PT) provide
incorrect second-order and higher-order growth. These errors implied by the use
of the perturbation theory to set up the initial conditions in N-body
simulations are called transients. Unless these transients are completely
suppressed compared with the dominant growing mode, we can not reproduce the
correct evolution of cumulants with orders higher than two, even though there
is no problem with the numerical scheme. We investigate the impact of
transients on the observable statistical quantities by performing -body
simulations with initial conditions based on Lagrangian perturbation theory
(LPT). We show that the effects of transients on the kurtosis from the initial
conditions, based on second-order Lagrangian perturbation theory (2LPT) have
almost disappeared by , as long as the initial conditions are set at . This means that for practical purposes, the initial conditions based on
2LPT are accurate enough for numerical calculations of skewness and kurtosis.Comment: 21 pages, 5 figures; accepted for publication in JCA
Thermodynamics of the self-gravitating ring model
We present the phase diagram, in both the microcanonical and the canonical
ensemble, of the Self-Gravitating-Ring (SGR) model, which describes the motion
of equal point masses constrained on a ring and subject to 3D gravitational
attraction. If the interaction is regularized at short distances by the
introduction of a softening parameter, a global entropy maximum always exists,
and thermodynamics is well defined in the mean-field limit. However, ensembles
are not equivalent and a phase of negative specific heat in the microcanonical
ensemble appears in a wide intermediate energy region, if the softening
parameter is small enough. The phase transition changes from second to first
order at a tricritical point, whose location is not the same in the two
ensembles. All these features make of the SGR model the best prototype of a
self-gravitating system in one dimension. In order to obtain the stable
stationary mass distribution, we apply a new iterative method, inspired by a
previous one used in 2D turbulence, which ensures entropy increase and, hence,
convergence towards an equilibrium state
Gravitational instability on the brane: the role of boundary conditions
An outstanding issue in braneworld theory concerns the setting up of proper
boundary conditions for the brane-bulk system. Boundary conditions (BC's)
employing regulatory branes or demanding that the bulk metric be nonsingular
have yet to be implemented in full generality. In this paper, we take a
different route and specify boundary conditions directly on the brane thereby
arriving at a local and closed system of equations (on the brane). We consider
a one-parameter family of boundary conditions involving the anisotropic stress
of the projection of the bulk Weyl tensor on the brane and derive an exact
system of equations describing scalar cosmological perturbations on a generic
braneworld with induced gravity. Depending upon our choice of boundary
conditions, perturbations on the brane either grow moderately (region of
stability) or rapidly (instability). In the instability region, the evolution
of perturbations usually depends upon the scale: small scale perturbations grow
much more rapidly than those on larger scales. This instability is caused by a
peculiar gravitational interaction between dark radiation and matter on the
brane. Generalizing the boundary conditions obtained by Koyama and Maartens, we
find for the Dvali-Gabadadze-Porrati model an instability, which leads to a
dramatic scale-dependence of the evolution of density perturbations in matter
and dark radiation. A different set of BC's, however, leads to a more moderate
and scale-independent growth of perturbations. For the mimicry braneworld,
which expands like LCDM, this class of BC's can lead to an earlier epoch of
structure formation.Comment: 35 pages, 9 figures, an appendix and references added, version to be
published in Classical and Quantum Gravit
Non-Gaussianity of the density distribution in accelerating universes II:N-body simulations
We explore the possibility of putting constraints on dark energy models with
statistical property of large scale structure in the non-linear region. In
particular, we investigate the dependence of non-Gaussianity of the
smoothed density distribution generated by the nonlinear dynamics. In order to
follow the non-linear evolution of the density fluctuations, we apply N-body
simulations based on scheme. We show that the relative difference
between non-Gaussianity of model and that of model is (skewness) and (kurtosis) for Mpc. We also calculate the
correspondent quantities for Mpc, (skewness) and
(kurtosis), and the difference turn out to be greater, even though
non-linearity in this scale is so strong that the complex physical processes
about galaxy formation affect the galaxy distribution. From this, we can expect
that the difference can be tested by all sky galaxy surveys with the help of
mock catalogs created by selection functions, which suggests that
non-Gaussianity of the density distribution potentially plays an important role
for extracting information on dark energy.Comment: 21 pages, 14 figure
Third-order perturbative solutions in the Lagrangian perturbation theory with pressure
Lagrangian perturbation theory for cosmological fluid describes structure
formation in the quasi-nonlinear stage well. We present a third-order
perturbative equation for Lagrangian perturbation with pressure in both the
longitudinal and transverse modes. Then we derive the perturbative solution for
simplest case.Comment: 11 pages, 1 figure; accepted for publication in Physical Review
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