CWRU PAT Coffee Agenda

Tuesdays 10:30 - 11:30 | Fridays 11:30 - 12:30

+2 Comparing Fully General Relativistic and Newtonian Calculations of Structure Formation.

gds6 +1 cxt282 +1

+2 A brief visit from a red and extremely elongated interstellar asteroid

gds6 +1 cjc5 +1

+2 There is No Missing Satellites Problem.

gds6 +1 mro28 +1

+2 Primordial black hole detection through diffractive microlensing.

jxs1325 +1 gds6 +1

+1 Measuring the effects of General Relativity at the Galactic Center with Future Extremely Large Telescopes.

gds6 +1

+1 Hawking's area theorem with a weaker energy condition.

gds6 +1

0 Could 1I/'Oumuamua be macroscopic dark matter?.

bump   cxt282 +1

0 GW170608: Observation of a 19-solar-mass Binary Black Hole Coalescence.

bump   jtd55 +1

Showing votes from 2017-11-17 12:30 to 2017-11-21 11:30 | Next meeting is Friday Aug 29th, 11:30 am.

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  • A brief visit from a red and extremely elongated interstellar asteroid

    cjc5
     

    Nature Article

astro-ph.CO

  • Comparing Fully General Relativistic and Newtonian Calculations of Structure Formation.- [PDF] - [Article]

    William E. East, Radosław Wojtak, Tom Abel
     

    In the standard approach to studying cosmological structure formation, the overall expansion of the Universe is assumed to be homogeneous, with the gravitational effect of inhomogeneities encoded entirely in a Newtonian potential. A topic of ongoing debate is to what degree this fully captures the dynamics dictated by general relativity, especially in the era of precision cosmology. To quantitatively assess this, we directly compare standard N-body Newtonian calculations to full numerical solutions of the Einstein equations, for cold matter with various magnitude initial inhomogeneities on scales comparable to the Hubble horizon. We analyze the differences in the evolution of density, luminosity distance, and other quantities defined with respect to fiducial observers. This is carried out by reconstructing the effective spacetime and matter fields dictated by the Newtonian quantities, and by taking care to distinguish effects of numerical resolution. We find that the fully general relativistic and Newtonian calculations show excellent agreement, even well into the nonlinear regime. They only notably differ in regions where the weak gravity assumption breaks down, which arise when considering extreme cases with perturbations exceeding standard values.

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