] in the context of neutrino-dominated
cosmologies, sheets are ubiquitous features in nonlinear structure
formation simulations of CDM-like models with baryonic fluid, and
manifest on a spectrum of length scales and formation epochs. Gas
collapses gravitationally into flattened sheet structures, forming two
plane parallel shock fronts that propagate in opposite directions,
heating the infalling gas. The heated gas between the shocks then
cools radiatively and condenses into galactic structures. Sheets are
characterized by essentially five distinct components: the preshock
inflow, the postshock heated gas, the strongly cooling/recombination
front separating the hot gas from the cold, the cooled postshocked
gas, and the unshocked adiabatically compressed gas at the
center. Several numerical calculations [42, 113, 20] have
been performed of these systems which include baryonic fluid with
hydrodynamical shock heating, ionization, recombination, dark matter,
thermal conductivity, and radiative cooling (Compton, bremsstrahlung,
and atomic line cooling), in both one and two spatial dimensions to
assert the significance of each physical process and to compute the
fragmentation scale. See also [14] where fully general
relativistic numerical calculations of cosmological sheets are
presented in plane symmetry, including relativistic hydrodynamical
shock heating and consistent coupling to spacetime curvature.
In addition, it is well known that gas which cools to 1 eV
through hydrogen line cooling will likely cool faster than it can
recombine. This nonequilibrium cooling increases the number of electrons and
ions (compared to the equilibrium case) which, in turn, increases the
concentrations of
and
, the intermediaries that
produce hydrogen molecules
. If large
concentrations of molecules form, excitations of the vibrational/rotational
modes of the molecules can efficiently cool the gas to well below 1 eV, the
minimum temperature expected from atomic
hydrogen line cooling. Because the gas
cools isobarically, the reduction in temperature results in an even greater
reduction in the Jeans mass, and the bound objects which form from the
fragmentation of
cooled cosmological sheets may be associated with
massive stars or star clusters.
Anninos and Norman [16] have carried out 1D and 2D
high resolution numerical
calculations to investigate the role of hydrogen molecules in the
cooling instability and fragmentation of cosmological sheets,
considering the collapse of perturbation wavelengths from
1 Mpc to 10 Mpc. They find that for the more energetic (long
wavelength) cases, the mass fraction of hydrogen molecules
reaches
, which cools
the gas to
eV and results in a fragmentation
scale of
. This represents reductions
of 50 and
in temperature and Jeans mass respectively when
compared, as in Figure 7, to
the equivalent case in which hydrogen molecules were
neglected.
However, the above calculations neglected
important interactions arising from self-consistent
treatments of radiation fields with ionizing
and photo-dissociating photons and self-shielding effects.
Susa and Umemura [118] studied the thermal history
and hydrodynamical collapse of pancakes in a UV background
radiation field. They solve the radiative transfer
of photons together with the hydrodynamics and chemistry
of atomic and molecular hydrogen species. Although their
simulations were restricted to one-dimensional plane
parallel symmetry, they suggest a classification scheme
distinguishing different dynamical behavior and
galaxy formation scenarios
based on the UV background radiation level and a
critical mass corresponding to
density
fluctuations in a standard CDM cosmology. These level
parameters distinguish galaxy formation scenarios
as they determine the local thermodynamics, the
rate of
line emissions and cooling, the amount of
starburst activity, and the rate and mechanism of
cloud collapse.
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Computational Cosmology: from the Early Universe to the Large Scale Structure Peter Anninos http://www.livingreviews.org/lrr-2001-2 © Max-Planck-Gesellschaft. ISSN 1433-8351 Problems/Comments to livrev@aei-potsdam.mpg.de |