Infinite self-gravitating systems and cosmological structure formation
Michael Joyce

TL;DR
This paper investigates the thermodynamic limit and dynamical evolution of infinite self-gravitating systems, demonstrating their similarity to cosmological structure formation and exploring their statistical mechanics properties.
Contribution
It introduces a well-defined dynamical approach to infinite self-gravitating systems and connects their evolution to cosmological models, providing a simplified 'toy model' for studying large-scale structure formation.
Findings
Clustering develops from initial conditions similar to cosmological simulations.
Two-point correlations follow a spatio-temporal scaling relation.
System evolution converges to self-similar behavior predicted by linear theory.
Abstract
The usual thermodynamic limit for systems of classical self-gravitating point particles becomes well defined, as a {\it dynamical} problem, using a simple physical prescription for the calculation of the force, equivalent to the so-called ``Jeans' swindle''. The relation of the resulting intrinsically out of equilibrium problem, of particles evolving from prescribed uniform initial conditions in an infinite space, to the one studied in current cosmological models (in an expanding universe) is explained. We then describe results of a numerical study of the dynamical evolution of such a system, starting from a simple class of infinite ``shuffled lattice'' initial conditions. The clustering, which develops in time starting from scales around the grid scale, is qualitatively very similar to that seen in cosmological simulations, which begin from lattices with applied correlated…
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