Galaxy filaments as pearl necklaces
E. Tempel, R. Kipper, E. Saar, M. Bussov, A. Hektor, J. Pelt

TL;DR
This paper reveals that galaxies in cosmic filaments are arranged in a regular pattern resembling pearl necklaces, with characteristic scales around 4-7 Mpc/h, which can inform cosmological models.
Contribution
It introduces a novel analysis showing regular spacing of galaxy groups along filaments, using the Bisous model and statistical tests, highlighting a characteristic scale in the cosmic web.
Findings
Galaxies are not uniformly distributed but form regular patterns along filaments.
Characteristic spacing of galaxy groups is approximately 7 Mpc/h.
A smaller characteristic scale of about 4 Mpc/h is also identified.
Abstract
Context. Galaxies in the Universe form chains (filaments) that connect groups and clusters of galaxies. The filamentary network includes nearly half of the galaxies and is visually the most striking feature in cosmological maps. Aims. We study the distribution of galaxies along the filamentary network, trying to find specific patterns and regularities. Methods. Galaxy filaments are defined by the Bisous model, a marked point process with interactions. We use the two-point correlation function and the Rayleigh Z-squared statistic to study how galaxies and galaxy groups are distributed along the filaments. Results. We show that galaxies and groups are not uniformly distributed along filaments, but tend to form a regular pattern. The characteristic length of the pattern is around 7 Mpc/h. A slightly smaller characteristic length 4 Mpc/h can also be found, using the Z-squared…
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