7–11 Apr 2025
University of Nottingham
Europe/London timezone

Gravitational Turbulence: the Small-Scale Limit of the Cold-Dark-Matter Power Spectrum

7 Apr 2025, 11:50
20m
Keighton Auditorium (University of Nottingham)

Keighton Auditorium

University of Nottingham

University Park Campus Nottingham NG7 2RD
Talk UK Cosmo Contributed talks

Speaker

Barry Ginat (University of Oxford)

Description

The matter power spectrum, $P(k)$, is one of the fundamental quantities in the study of large-scale structure in cosmology. In this talk, I will study its small-scale asymptotic limit, and give a theoretical argument to the effect that, for cold dark matter in $d$ spatial dimensions, $P(k)$ has a universal $k^{-d}$ asymptotic scaling with the wave-number $k$, for $k \gg k_{\rm nl}$, where $k_{\rm nl}^{-1}$ denotes the length scale at which non-linearities in gravitational interactions become important. I will explain how gravitational collapse drives a turbulent phase-space flow of the quadratic Casimir invariant, where the linear and non-linear time scales are balanced, and this balance dictates the $k$ dependence of the power spectrum. The $k^{-d}$ scaling can also be derived by expressing $P(k)$ as a phase-space integral in the framework of kinetic field theory, analysing it by the saddle-point method; the dominant critical points of this integral are precisely those where the time scales are balanced. The coldness of the dark-matter distribution function - its non-vanishing only on a $d$-dimensional sub-manifold of phase-space - underpins both approaches. I will show Vlasov-Poisson simulations to support the theory.

Author

Barry Ginat (University of Oxford)

Co-authors

Michael Nastac (University of Oxford) Dr Robert Ewart (Princeton University) Dr Sara Konrad (Heidelberg University) Prof. Matthias Bartelmann (Heidelberg University) Prof. Alexander Schekochihin (University of Oxford)

Presentation materials

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