Slow Diffusive Gravitational Instability Before Decoupling
Todd A. Thompson

TL;DR
This paper identifies a slow diffusive gravitational instability before decoupling, showing that the universe is linearly unstable on small scales, but with a growth rate too slow to significantly affect early density perturbations.
Contribution
It reveals a previously overlooked slow diffusive mode of gravitational instability before decoupling, clarifying its physics and implications for primordial perturbation growth.
Findings
The instability growth rate is independent of scale at large wavenumber.
Growth time is about 100 times the age of the universe at decoupling.
The mode's effects are at the percent level on small-scale perturbations.
Abstract
Radiative diffusion damps acoustic modes at large comoving wavenumber (k) before decoupling (``Silk damping''). In a simple WKB analysis, neglecting moments of the temperature distribution beyond the quadrupole, damping appears in the acoustic mode as a term of order ik^2/(taudot) where taudot is the scattering rate per unit conformal time. Although the Jeans instability is stabilized on scales smaller than the adiabatic Jeans length, I show that the medium is linearly unstable to first order in (1/taudot) to a slow diffusive mode. At large comoving wavenumber, the characteristic growth rate becomes independent of spatial scale and constant: (t_{KH}a)^-1 ~ (128 pi G/9 kappa_T c)(rho_m/rho_b), where "a" is the scale factor, rho_m and rho_b are the matter and baryon energy density, respectively, and kappa_T is the Thomson opacity. This is the characteristic timescale for a fluid parcel to…
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