The Size of the Longest Filaments in the Universe

We analyze the filamentarity in the Las Campanas redshift survey (LCRS) and determine the length scale at which filaments are statistically significant. The largest length scale at which filaments are statistically significant, real objects is between 70 and 80 h super(-1) Mpc for the LCRS-3 degree...

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Veröffentlicht in:The Astrophysical journal 2004-05, Vol.606 (1), p.25-31
Hauptverfasser: Bharadwaj, Somnath, Bhavsar, Suketu P, Sheth, Jatush V
Format: Artikel
Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:We analyze the filamentarity in the Las Campanas redshift survey (LCRS) and determine the length scale at which filaments are statistically significant. The largest length scale at which filaments are statistically significant, real objects is between 70 and 80 h super(-1) Mpc for the LCRS-3 degree slice. Filamentary features longer than 80 h super(-1) Mpc, although identified, are not statistically significant; they arise from chance alignments. For the five other LCRS slices, filaments of lengths 50-70 h super(-1) Mpc are statistically significant, but not beyond. These results indicate that while individual filaments up to 80 h super(-1) Mpc are statistically significant, the impression of structure on larger scales is a visual effect. On scales larger than 80 h super(-1) Mpc, the filaments interconnect by statistical chance to form the filament-void network. The reality of the 80 h super(-1) Mpc features in the-3 degree slice makes them the longest coherent features in the LCRS. While filaments are a natural outcome of gravitational instability, any numerical model that attempts to describe the formation of large-scale structure in the universe must produce coherent structures on scales that match these observations.
ISSN:0004-637X
1538-4357
DOI:10.1086/382140