Evolution of spherical overdensity in Chaplygin gas model
Amin Rezaei Akbarieh, Mohammad Ahmadi, Yousef Izadi, Shahabeddin M., Aslmarand, Warner A. Miller

TL;DR
This paper investigates the evolution of spherical overdensities in the Chaplygin gas dark energy model, deriving collapse parameters and comparing structure formation timing with standard cosmology.
Contribution
It demonstrates the equivalence of quintessence and tachyonic models to Chaplygin gas and analyzes their impact on spherical collapse and structure formation.
Findings
Large-scale structures form earlier than in standard cosmology.
Derived spherical collapse parameters for Chaplygin gas model.
Compared collapse results with Einstein-de Sitter model.
Abstract
Even though many scalar field models of dark energy have been considered in the literature, there is another interesting class of dark energy models involving a fluid known as a Chaplygin gas. In addition to describing the dark energy, both scalar-tensor model and the Chaplygin gas model are suitable candidates for explaining the spherical cosmological collapse. One of the most well-known scalar field models is the quintessence model, which was first introduced to explain an accelerating expanding universe. Using a special form of the quintessence model that is equivalent to Chaplygin gas, we describe evolution of a spherical collapse. We study the cosmological properties of the quintessence field with a special potential. In addition to the quintessence model, that can be converted into a Chaplygin gas model in a particular case, we claim that the fixed-potential tachyonic model is…
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