6533b832fe1ef96bd129a4c6

RESEARCH PRODUCT

Scaling laws in the distribution of galaxies

Bernard J. T. JonesVicent J. MartínezEnn SaarVirginia Trimble

subject

PhysicsStructure (mathematical logic)EXTRA-GALACTIC NEBULAEMICROWAVE BACKGROUND-RADIATIONCOSMIC cancer databaseCold dark matterAstrophysics (astro-ph)Cosmic microwave backgroundCAMPANAS REDSHIFT SURVEY2-POINT CORRELATION-FUNCTIONFOS: Physical sciencesGeneral Physics and AstronomyAstrophysicsN-BODY SIMULATIONSAstrophysicsPOINT CORRELATION-FUNCTIONSGalaxyCOLD DARK-MATTERFractalPROBE WMAP OBSERVATIONSDIGITAL SKY SURVEYPEAK-PATCH PICTUREStatistical physicsScalingGalaxy cluster

description

Research done during the previous century established our Standard Cosmological Model. There are many details still to be filled in, but few would seriously doubt the basic premise. Past surveys have revealed that the large-scale distribution of galaxies in the Universe is far from random: it is highly structured over a vast range of scales. To describe cosmic structures, we need to build mathematically quantifiable descriptions of structure. Identifying where scaling laws apply and the nature of those scaling laws is an important part of understanding which physical mechanisms have been responsible for the organization of clusters, superclusters of galaxies and the voids between them. Finding where these scaling laws are broken is equally important since this indicates the transition to different underlying physics. In describing scaling laws we are helped by making analogies with fractals: mathematical constructs that can possess a wide variety of scaling properties. We must beware, however, of saying that the Universe is a fractal on some range of scales: it merely exhibits a specific kind of fractal-like behavior on those scales. We exploit the richness of fractal scaling behavior merely as an important supplement to the usual battery of statistical descriptors. We review the history of how we have learned about the structure of the Universe and present the data and methodologies that are relevant to the question of discovering and understanding any scaling properties that structure may have. The ultimate goal is to have a complete understanding of how that structure emerged. We are getting close!

https://doi.org/10.1103/revmodphys.76.1211