Multiscale Phenomenology of the Cosmic Web
Miguel A. Aragon-Calvo (1), Rien van de Weygaert (2), Bernard J.T., Jones (2) ((1) Dept. Physics & Astronomy, the Johns Hopkins University,, Baltimore, U.S.A., (2) Kapteyn Astronomical Institute, University of, Groningen, the Netherlands)

TL;DR
This paper investigates the structure and connectivity of the Cosmic Web using a multiscale morphology filter to classify matter into clusters, filaments, and walls, revealing their properties and relationships in a cosmological simulation.
Contribution
The study introduces a Multiscale Morphology Filter (MMF) to dissect cosmic matter distribution into distinct morphologies and analyze their properties and connectivity in detail.
Findings
Most mass is in filaments, followed by clusters; walls are less significant.
Massive clusters connect to more filaments, with up to five for the most massive.
Filament width is about 2 Mpc/h, walls are 5-8 Mpc/h wide.
Abstract
We analyze the structure and connectivity of the distinct morphologies that define the Cosmic Web. With the help of our Multiscale Morphology Filter (MMF), we dissect the matter distribution of a cosmological CDM N-body computer simulation into cluster, filaments and walls. The MMF is ideally suited to adress both the anisotropic morphological character of filaments and sheets, as well as the multiscale nature of the hierarchically evolved cosmic matter distribution. The results of our study may be summarized as follows: i).- While all morphologies occupy a roughly well defined range in density, this alone is not sufficient to differentiate between them given their overlap. Environment defined only in terms of density fails to incorporate the intrinsic dynamics of each morphology. This plays an important role in both linear and non linear interactions between haloes. ii).- Most…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
