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Chapter5 Script

The document discusses the formation of structure in the universe. It covers topics like clustering of dark matter, acoustic oscillations of baryons and photons, and anisotropies in the cosmic microwave background radiation. Perturbation equations and their solutions are presented. The shape of the matter power spectrum and signatures of primordial sound waves in the CMB are also explained.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
11 views8 pages

Chapter5 Script

The document discusses the formation of structure in the universe. It covers topics like clustering of dark matter, acoustic oscillations of baryons and photons, and anisotropies in the cosmic microwave background radiation. Perturbation equations and their solutions are presented. The shape of the matter power spectrum and signatures of primordial sound waves in the CMB are also explained.

Uploaded by

sandresdv13
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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Chapter 5.

STRUCTURE FORMATION

ion
d iat
Ra Neutrions

Dark
CMB ⇐ Photons
Energy

Thomson
Scattering Metric

Dark
Electrons Matter
⇒ LSS
Co
Sca ulom
tte b
rin
g Baryons r
tte
Ma

• Perturbed Einstein equations:

(E1) ∇2 Φ − 3H(Φ0 + HΦ) = 4πGa2 ρ̄δ


(E2) Φ0 + HΦ = −4πGa2 (ρ̄ + P̄ )v
(E3) Φ00 + 3HΦ0 + (2H0 + H2 )Φ = 4πGa2 δP

• Perturbed conservation equations:

0 4
(C) δm = −∇ · v m + 3Φ 0 , δr0 = − ∇ · v r + 4Φ 0 ,
3
0 1
(E) vm = −Hv m − ∇Φ . v r0 = − ∇δr − ∇Φ .
4
where H and Φ are sourced by all components.
5.1 CLUSTERING OF DARK MATTER
Recall from Chapter 4 that
00 0
δm + Hδm = ∇2 Φ + 3(Φ00 + HΦ0 ) .

On subhorizon scales, radiation fluctuations oscillate and the time-averaged


gravitational potential is only sourced by the matter fluctuations:

∇2 Φ + 3(Φ00 + HΦ0 ) ≈ 4πGa2 ρ̄m δm .

Hence, we get
00 0
δm + Hδm − 4πGa2 ρ̄m δm ≈ 0 .

• During the radiation era, we have 4πGa2 ρ̄m  H2 , so that

00 1 0
δm + δ ≈ 0,
η m
where we used H = 1/η. The growing mode solution is

δm ∝ ln η ∝ ln a .

• During the matter era, we have 4πGa2 ρ̄m ≈ 23 H2 , so that

00 2 0 6
δm + δm − 2 δm ≈ 0 ,
η η
where we used H = 2/η. The growing mode solution is

δm ∝ η 2 ∝ a .

⇔ Dark matter only clusters after the universe becomes matter dominated.

2
The observed fluctuations can be written as

δm,k (z) = T (k, z) × Rk

transfer function initial conditions

The matter power spectrum is

Pδ (k) ≡ |δm,k |2 = |T (k)|2 × |Rk |2 .

For scale-invariant initial conditions, |Rk |2 ∝ k −3 , we predict:

large scales small scales

Ex: Explain the shape of the spectrum.

3
5.2 ACOUSTIC OSCILLATIONS
Recall from Chapter 4 that

0 4 0
 δr = − ∇ · v r + 4Φ (C)


1 4 3
δr00 − ∇2 δr = ∇2 Φ + 4Φ00
3 3
 v 0r = − 1 ∇δr − ∇Φ

 (E)
4

Let us discuss the solution on subhorizon scales:

• During the radiation era, the potential decays, Φ ∝ a−2 , so that


1
δr00 − ∇2 δr ≈ 0 .
3
⇒ Fluctuations oscillate around δr = 0, with frequency ω = √1 k.
3

• During the matter era, Φ = const., so that


1 4
δr00 − ∇2 δr = ∇2 Φ = const.
3 3
⇒ Fluctuations oscillate around δr = −4Φ0 (k).

The coupling between photons and baryons, modifies the Euler equation
1
[(1 + R)v γ ] 0 = − ∇δγ − (1 + R)∇Φ (E)
4
↑ ↑
inertial gravitational
mass mass

Ωb h2
  
qb 3 ρ̄b a
where R ≡ = = 0.6 .
qγ 4 ρ̄γ 0.02 10−3

4
Combining this with (C), we find

R0 4 2 4R 0 0
δγ00 + 0 2 2 00
δ − cs ∇ δγ = ∇ Φ + 4Φ + Φ ,
1+R γ 3 1+R
1
where c2s ≡ .
3(1 + R)
⇒ Fluctuations oscillate around δγ = −4(1 + R)Φ0 (k), with frequency ω = cs k.

The general solution looks like this:

damp
ing

dri
vin
g
5 10 15 20

Next, we will study the imprint of these primordial sound waves in the CMB.

5
5.3 CMB ANISOTROPIES
The first thing we see in the CMB is the motion of the solar system:

HOT

COLD

The momentum of the observed photons is Doppler shifted:

p0 (n̂) ≈ p (1 + n̂ · v) ,

corresponding to a dipolar temperature anisotropy


δT (n̂) T0 (n̂) − T p0 (n̂) − p
≡ = = n̂ · v .
T T p
Fitting the CMB dipole, we find

v = 368 km/s .

After subtracting the dipole, we are left with the primordial anisotropy.

Consider the propagation of photons in the perturbed spacetime

ds2 = a2 (η) (1 + 2Ψ)dη 2 − (1 − 2Φ)δij dxi dxj .


 

From the geodesic equation, we find

1 dp 1 da ∂Ψ ∂Φ
= − − p̂i i +
p dη a dη ∂x ∂η
↑ ↑ ↑
redshift gravitational redshift

6
This can be written as

d dΨ ∂(Ψ + Φ) dΨ ∂Ψ ∂Ψ
ln(ap) = − + , ≡ + p̂i i .
dη dη ∂η dη ∂η ∂x

Integrating from η∗ (last-scattering) to η0 (today), we get


Z η0

ln(ap)0 = ln(ap)∗ + (Ψ∗ − Ψ0 ) + dη (Ψ + Φ) .
η∗ ∂η
 
δT
Using ap ∝ aT = aT̄ 1 + , we find

intrinsic δT gravitational redshift
↓ ↓
  Z η0
δT 1
(n̂) = δγ + Ψ + n̂ · v e + dη (Ψ 0 + Φ 0 ) ,
T̄ 4 ∗ η∗

↑ ↑ ↑
SW Doppler ISW

1
where we used (δT /T̄ )∗ = (δγ )∗ [since ρr ∝ T 4 ] and added a Doppler term
4
due to the motion of electrons at the surface of last-scattering:

7
The CMB anisotropies are a superposition of the acoustic waves, captured at
recombination and projected onto the sky:

The two-point correlation function is Legendre polynomials

X 2l + 1 ↓
0
δT (n̂)δT (n̂ ) = Cl Pl (cos θ) ,

l ↑
where n̂ · n̂0 ≡ cos θ. angular power spectrum

For scale-invariant initial conditions, we predict:

Total
SW
Doppler
ISW

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