Crawling the cosmic network: exploring the morphology of structure in the galaxy distribution

被引:40
作者
Bond, Nicholas A. [1 ]
Strauss, Michael A. [1 ]
Cen, Renyue [1 ]
机构
[1] Princeton Univ, Princeton Univ Observ, Princeton, NJ 08544 USA
基金
美国国家科学基金会; 美国国家航空航天局;
关键词
methods: data analysis; surveys; cosmology: observations; large-scale structure of Universe; DIGITAL SKY SURVEY; LARGE-SCALE STRUCTURE; 3-POINT CORRELATION-FUNCTION; HALO OCCUPATION DISTRIBUTION; REDSHIFT SURVEY; DARK-MATTER; FILAMENTARY STRUCTURE; UNIVERSE; WEB; EVOLUTION;
D O I
10.1111/j.1365-2966.2010.16823.x
中图分类号
P1 [天文学];
学科分类号
0704 ;
摘要
Although coherent large-scale structures such as filaments and walls are apparent to the eye in galaxy redshift surveys, they have so far proven difficult to characterize with computer algorithms. This paper presents a procedure that uses the eigenvalues and eigenvectors of the Hessian matrix of the galaxy density field to characterize the morphology of large-scale structure. By analysing the smoothed density field and its Hessian matrix, we can determine the types of structure - walls, filaments or clumps - that dominate the large-scale distribution of galaxies as a function of scale. We have run the algorithm on mock galaxy distributions in a Lambda cold dark matter cosmological N-body simulation and the observed galaxy distributions in the Sloan Digital Sky Survey. The morphology of structure is similar between the two catalogues, both being filament-dominated on 10-20 h-1 Mpc smoothing scales and clump-dominated on 5 h-1 Mpc scales. There is evidence for walls in both distributions, but walls are not the dominant structures on scales smaller than similar to 25 h-1 Mpc. Analysis of the simulation suggests that, on a given comoving smoothing scale, structures evolve with time from walls to filaments to clumps, where those found on smaller smoothing scales are further in this progression at a given time.
引用
收藏
页码:1609 / 1628
页数:20
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