Aspects of gravitational clustering and structure formation in the Universe
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Abstract
The distribution of galaxies, halo abundance, and peculiar velocities are influenced by non
linear gravitational interactions, making the study of non-linear evolution crucial for accu
rate cosmological predictions. Thus, it is essential to study the underlying assumptions in
these processes to improve predictions like halo abundance and determination of the Hubble
Lemaître constant H0. We explore these aspects using N-body simulations. The halo model
can be used to make various predictions and interpretation of observations, with the halo
mass function as a core ingredient. The theoretical models of mass function can be formu
lated without referencing the cosmological model and input power spectrum. Mass functions
obtained from N-body simulations show systematic deviations of 5-20% from theoretical pre
dictions. The physical origin of deviations is complex to understand and may result from
cosmology, the power spectrum, or both. To investigate the issue, we examine mass function
deviations from universality for scale-free power spectra with an Einstein-de Sitter cosmol
ogy. Weshowthat the mass function has explicit dependence on the slope of the input power
spectrum. We extend our analysis to ΛCDM cosmologies and show that an effective index of
the ΛCDM model can correspond to the mass function from scale free cosmologies as a first
approximation. Our results indicate that an improved analytical theory is required to provide
better fits to the mass function. Furthermore, structure formation has led to deviations from
homogeneityandisotropyonscalesuptoatleast100Mpc/h,expectedtoaffectmeasurements
of H0. Various efforts have been made to quantify this effect. In our second study, we revisit
this issue of the concordance model. WefindacorrelationbetweenerrorsinH0 estimatesand
the density around the observer. Further, our mock observations reveal that deviations of up
to 5% can occur in Milky Way-sized halos. While this finding alone does not fully resolve the
Hubble tension, it may account for part of it. We rely on N-body simulations for these studies.
Hence, it is essential to understand their limitations to avoid misinterpreting data. We show
that the missing power at small scales introduces errors in the root-mean-square fluctuations
and, consequently, in the simulated mass function. These errors are expected to diminish as
the scale of non-linearity increases. Our analytical calculation indicates that mode coupling
between small and large scales depends on resolving collapsed halos. Therefore, accurate
mode coupling estimates require sufficient halos in the simulation