Thursday, April 25, 2013

1304.6565 (Steffen Heß et al.)

Simulating Structure Formation of the Local Universe    [PDF]

Steffen Heß, Francisco-Shu Kitaura, Stefan Gottloeber
In this work we present cosmological N-body simulations of the Local Universe with initial conditions constrained by the Two-Micron Redshift Survey (2MRS) within a cubic volume of 180 Mpc/h side-length centred at the Local Group. We use a self-consistent Bayesian based approach to explore the joint parameter space of primordial density fluctuations and peculiar velocity fields, which are compatible with the 2MRS galaxy distribution after cosmic evolution. This method (the KIGEN-code) includes the novel ALPT (Augmented Lagrangian Perturbation Theory) structure formation model which combines second order LPT (2LPT) on large scales with the spherical collapse model on small scales. Furthermore we describe coherent flows with 2LPT and include a dispersion term to model fingers-of-god (fogs) arising from virialised structures. These implementations are crucial to avoid artificial filamentary structures, which appear when using a structure formation model with 2LPT and data with compressed fogs. We assume LCDM cosmology throughout our method. The recovered initial Gaussian fields are used to perform a set of 25 constrained simulations. Statistically this ensemble of simulations is in agreement with a reference set of 25 simulations based on randomly seeded Gaussian fluctuations in terms of matter statistics, power-spectra and mass functions. Considering the entire volume of (180 Mpc/h)^3 we obtain correlation coefficients of about 98.3% for the cell-to-cell comparison between the simulated density fields and the galaxy density field in log-space with Gaussian smoothing scales of r_S=3.5 Mpc\h (74% for r_S=1.4 Mpc/h). The cross power-spectra show correlations with the galaxy distribution down to scales of 2.2-3.0 Mpc/h. The simulations we present provide a fully nonlinear density and velocity field with a high level of correlation with the observed galaxy distribution at scales of a few Mpc.
View original: http://arxiv.org/abs/1304.6565

No comments:

Post a Comment