22 research outputs found

    Kurtosis of Large-Scale Cosmic Fields

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    An attractive and simple hypothesis for the formation of large-scale structure is that it developed by gravitational instability from primordial fluctuations with an initially Gaussian probability distribution. Non-linear gravitational evolution drives the distribution away from the Gaussian form, generating measurable skewness and kurtosis even when the variance of the fluctuations is much smaller than unity. We use perturbation theory to compute the kurtosis of the mass density field and the velocity divergence field that arises during the weakly non-linear evolution of initially Gaussian fluctuations. We adopt an Einstein--de~Sitter universe for the perturbative calculations, and we discuss the generalization to a universe of arbitrary Ω\Omega. We obtain semi-analytic results for the case of scale-free, power-law spectra of the initial fluctuations and final smoothing of cosmic fields with a Gaussian filter. We also give an exact analytical formula for the dependence of the skewness of these fields on the power spectrum index. We show that the kurtosis decreases with the power spectrum index, and we compare our more accurate results for the kurtosis to previous estimates from Monte Carlo integrations. We also compare our results to values obtained from cosmological N-body simulations with power-law initial spectra. Measurements of the skewness and kurtosis parameters can be used to test the hypothesis that structure in the universe formed by gravitational instability from Gaussian initial conditions.Comment: 29 pp incl. 8 figs, uuencoded compressed postscript, submitted to MNRAS, preprints CAMK/281, IASSNS-AST 94/3

    Previrialization: Perturbative and N-Body Results

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    We present a series of N-body experiments which confirm the reality of the previrialization effect. We also use weakly nonlinear perturbative approach to study the phenomenon. These two approaches agree when the rms density contrast, σ\sigma, is small; more surprisingly, they remain in agreement when σ≈1\sigma \approx 1. When the slope of the initial power spectrum is n>−1n>-1, nonlinear tidal interactions slow down the growth of density fluctuations and the magnitude of the suppression increases when nn (i.e. the relative amount of small scale power) is increased. For n<−1n<-1 we see an opposite effect: the fluctuations grow more rapidly than in linear theory. The transition occurs at n=−1n=-1 when the weakly nonlinear correction to σ\sigma is close to zero and the growth rate is close to linear. Our results resolve recent controversy between two N-body studies of previrialization. Peebles (1990) assumed n=0n=0 and found strong evidence in support of previrialization, while Evrard \& Crone (1992), who assumed n=−1n=-1, reached opposite conclusions. As we show here, the initial conditions with n=−1n=-1 are rather special because the nonlinear effects nearly cancel out for that particular spectrum. In addition to our calculations for scale-free initial spectra, we show results for a more realistic spectrum of Peacock \& Dodds (1994). Its slope near the scale usually adopted for normalization is close to −1-1, so σ\sigma is close to linear. Our results retroactively justify linear normalization at 8h−1h^{-1} Mpc, while also demonstrating the danger and limitations of this practice.Comment: Significantly revised, 25 pages, uuencoded compressed postscript, figures included, to appear in Ap

    Skewness as a probe of baryon acoustic oscillations

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    In this study we show that the skewness S_3 of the cosmic density field contains a significant and potentially detectable and clean imprint of Baryonic Acoustic Oscillations. Although the BAO signal in the skewness has a lower amplitude than second order measures like the two-point correlation function and power spectrum, it has the advantage of a considerably lower sensitivity to systematic influences. Because it lacks a direct dependence on bias if this concerns simple linear bias, skewness will be considerably less beset by uncertainties due to galaxy bias. Also, it has a weaker sensitivity to redshift distortion effects. We use perturbation theory to evaluate the magnitude of the effect on the volume-average skewness, for various cosmological models. One important finding of our analysis is that the skewness BAO signal occurs at smaller scales than that in second order statistics. For an LCDM spectrum with WMAP7 normalization, the BAO feature has a maximum wiggle amplitude of ~3% and appears at a scale of ~82Mpc/h. We conclude that the detection of BAO wiggles in future extensive galaxy surveys via the skewness of the observed galaxy distribution may provide us with a useful, and potentially advantageous, measure of the nature of Dark Energy.Comment: 7 pages, 5 figures, accepted for publication in MNRAS, minor change

    An estimate of \Omega_m without priors

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    Using mean relative peculiar velocity measurements for pairs of galaxies, we estimate the cosmological density parameter Ωm\Omega_m and the amplitude of density fluctuations σ8\sigma_8. Our results suggest that our statistic is a robust and reproducible measure of the mean pairwise velocity and thereby the Ωm\Omega_m parameter. We get Ωm=0.30−0.07+0.17\Omega_m = 0.30^{+0.17}_{-0.07} and σ8=1.13−0.23+0.22\sigma_8 = 1.13^{+0.22}_{-0.23}. These estimates do not depend on prior assumptions on the adiabaticity of the initial density fluctuations, the ionization history, or the values of other cosmological parameters.Comment: 12 pages, 4 figures, slight changes to reflect published versio

    Skewness as a probe of non-Gaussian initial conditions

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    We compute the skewness of the matter distribution arising from non-linear evolution and from non-Gaussian initial perturbations. We apply our result to a very generic class of models with non-Gaussian initial conditions and we estimate analytically the ratio between the skewness due to non-linear clustering and the part due to the intrinsic non-Gaussianity of the models. We finally extend our estimates to higher moments.Comment: 5 pages, 2 ps-figs., accepted for publication in PRD, rapid com

    Nonlinear Effects in the Amplitude of Cosmological Density Fluctuations

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    The amplitude of cosmological density fluctuations, sigma_8, has been studied and estimated by analysing many cosmological observations. The values of the estimates vary considerably between the various probes. However, different estimators probe the value of sigma_8 in different cosmological scales and do not take into account the nonlinear evolution of the parameter at late times. We show that estimates of the amplitude of cosmological density fluctuations derived from cosmic flows are systematically higher than those inferred at early epochs from the CMB because of nonlinear evolution at later times. We discuss the past and future evolution of linear and nonlinear perturbations, derive corrections to the value of sigma_8 and compare amplitudes after accounting for these differences.Comment: 9 pages, 4 figures, 1 table. Accepted for publication in JCA
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