Tuesdays 10:30 - 11:30 | Fridays 11:30 - 12:30
Showing votes from 2015-11-03 11:30 to 2015-11-06 12:30 | Next meeting is Friday May 15th, 11:30 am.
While the use of numerical general relativity for modeling astrophysical phenomena and compact objects is commonplace, the application to cosmological scenarios is only just beginning. Here, we examine the expansion of a spacetime using the Baumgarte-Shapiro-Shibata-Nakamura (BSSN) formalism of numerical relativity in synchronous gauge. The universe that emerges exhibits an average Friedmann-Lema\"itre-Robertston-Walker (FLRW) behavior, however this universe also exhibits locally inhomogeneous expansion beyond that expected in linear perturbation theory around a FLRW background. This departure from FLRW is an important path-dependent effect that will need to be considered for precise calculations of physical observables in an inhomogeneous universe.
We present cosmological-scale numerical simulations of an evolving universe in full general relativity (GR) and introduce a new numerical tool, {\sc CosmoGRaPH}, which employs the Baumgarte-Shapiro-Shibata-Nakamura (BSSN) formalism on a 3-dimensional grid. Using {\sc CosmoGRaPH}, we calculate the effect of an inhomogeneous matter distribution on the evolution of a spacetime. We also present the results of a set of standard stability tests to demonstrate the robustness of our simulations.
Linear halo bias is the response of dark matter halo number density to a long wavelength fluctuation in the dark matter density. Using abundance matching between separate universe simulations which absorb the latter into a change in the background, we test the consistency relation between the change in a one point function, the halo mass function, and a two point function, the halo-matter cross correlation in the long wavelength limit. We find excellent agreement between the two at the $1-2\%$ level for average halo biases between $1 \lesssim \bar b_1 \lesssim 4$ and no statistically significant deviations at the $4-5\%$ level out to $\bar b_1 \approx 8$. The separate universe technique provides a way of calibrating linear halo bias efficiently for even highly biased rare halos in the $\Lambda$CDM model. Observational violation of the consistency relation would indicate new physics, e.g.~in the dark matter, dark energy or primordial non-Gaussianity sectors.
I argue that scattering theory for massless particles in Minkowski space should be reformulated as a mapping between past and future representations of an algebra of densities on the conformal boundary. These densities are best thought of as living on the momentum space light cone dual to null infinity, which describes the simultaneous eigenstates of the BMS generators. The currents describe the flow of other quantum numbers through the holographic screen at infinity. They are operator valued measures on the momentum light cone, with non-zero support at $P = 0$, which is necessary to describe finite flows of total momentum, with zero energy-momentum density, on the asymptotic holographic screen. Jet states, the closest approximation to the conventional notion of asymptotic particle state, have finite momentum flowing out through spherical caps of finite opening angle, with the zero momentum currents vanishing in annuli surrounding these caps. Although these notions are valid both in field theory and quantum gravity, I'll argue that they form the basis for understanding the holographic/covariant entropy principle in the latter framework, where the densities form a complete set of operators. The variables on a finite area holographic screen are restrictions of those at infinity. The restriction is implemented by a cutoff on the Euclidean Dirac spectrum on the screen, which is a generalized UV/IR correspondence.