Revelada a maior de todas as simulações do universo

quarta-feira, dezembro 14, 2011

The New Horizon Run Cosmological N-Body Simulations

Juhan Kim, Changbom Park, Graziano Rossi, Sang Min Lee, J. Richard Gott III

(Submitted on 8 Dec 2011)

We present two large cosmological N-body simulations, called Horizon Run 2 (HR2) and Horizon Run 3 (HR3), made using 6000^3 = 216 billions and 7210^3 = 374 billion particles, spanning a volume of (7.200 Gpc/h)^3 and (10.815 Gpc/h)^3, respectively. These simulations improve on our previous Horizon Run 1 (HR1) up to a factor of 4.4 in volume, and range from 2600 to over 8800 times the volume of the Millennium Run. In addition, they achieve a considerably finer mass resolution, down to 1.25x10^11 M_sun/h, allowing to resolve galaxy-size halos with mean particle separations of 1.2 Mpc/h and 1.5 Mpc/h, respectively. We have measured the power spectrum, correlation function, mass function and basic halo properties with percent level accuracy, and verified that they correctly reproduce the LCDM theoretical expectations, in excellent agreement with linear perturbation theory. Our unprecedentedly large-volume N-body simulations can be used for a variety of studies in cosmology and astrophysics, ranging from large-scale structure topology, baryon acoustic oscillations, dark energy and the characterization of the expansion history of the Universe, till galaxy formation science - in connection with the new SDSS-III. To this end, we made a total of 35 all-sky mock surveys along the past light cone out to z=0.7 (8 from the HR2 and 27 from the HR3), to simulate the BOSS geometry. The simulations and mock surveys are already publicly available at this http URL

Comments: 18 pages, 10 figures, accepted for publication in the Journal of the Korean Astronomical Society (JKAS). The paper with high-resolution figures is available at this http URL
Subjects: Cosmology and Extragalactic Astrophysics (astro-ph.CO)
Cite as: arXiv:1112.1754v1 [astro-ph.CO]

Submission historyFrom: Graziano Rossi [view email
[v1] Thu, 8 Dec 2011 03:11:05 GMT (1258kb)

+++++