Imprints of dark energy on cosmic structure formation: II) Non-Universality of the halo mass function
J. Courtin, Y. Rasera, J.-M. Alimi, P.-S. Corasaniti, V. Boucher, A., Fuzfa

TL;DR
This study investigates the non-universality of the halo mass function in dark energy cosmologies, revealing its dependence on cosmological parameters and evolution history, and provides a refined fitting formula.
Contribution
It demonstrates that the halo mass function varies with cosmology and redshift, challenging the assumption of universality, and offers an improved fitting formula for diverse cosmologies.
Findings
Deviations from universality are correlated with the linear growth factor.
Non-linear collapse and virialization depend on cosmology.
A fitting formula with 5% accuracy across models is provided.
Abstract
The universality of the halo mass function is investigated in the context of dark energy cosmologies. This widely used approximation assumes that the mass function can be expressed as a function of the matter density omega_m and the rms linear density fluctuation sigma only, with no explicit dependence on the properties of dark energy or redshift. In order to test this hypothesis we run a series of 15 high-resolution N-body simulations for different cosmological models. These consists of three LCDM cosmologies best fitting WMAP-1, 3 and 5 years data, and three toy-models characterized by a Ratra-Peebles quintessence potential with different slopes and amounts of dark energy density. These toy models have very different evolutionary histories at the background and linear level, but share the same sigma8 value. For each of these models we measure the mass function from catalogues of halos…
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