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The cosmic spiderweb: equivalence of cosmic, architectural, and origami tessellations

Authors :
Neyrinck, Mark C.
Hidding, Johan
Konstantatou, Marina
van de Weygaert, Rien
Source :
Roy Soc Open Sci 2018, 5, 171582
Publication Year :
2017

Abstract

For over twenty years, the term 'cosmic web' has guided our understanding of the large-scale arrangement of matter in the cosmos, accurately evoking the concept of a network of galaxies linked by filaments. But the physical correspondence between the cosmic web and structural-engineering or textile 'spiderwebs' is even deeper than previously known, and extends to origami tessellations as well. Here we explain that in a good structure-formation approximation known as the adhesion model, threads of the cosmic web form a spiderweb, i.e. can be strung up to be entirely in tension. The correspondence is exact if nodes sampling voids are included, and if structure is excluded within collapsed regions (walls, filaments and haloes), where dark-matter multistreaming and baryonic physics affect the structure. We also suggest how concepts arising from this link might be used to test cosmological models: for example, to test for large-scale anisotropy and rotational flows in the cosmos.<br />Comment: Accepted to Royal Society Open Science. See illustrative adhesion-model Python notebook: https://github.com/jhidding/adhesion-example/tree/master/notebook and interactive spiderweb-design Python notebook: https://github.com/neyrinck/sectional-tess, runnable without installation at https://mybinder.org/v2/gh/neyrinck/sectional-tess/master

Details

Database :
arXiv
Journal :
Roy Soc Open Sci 2018, 5, 171582
Publication Type :
Report
Accession number :
edsarx.1710.04509
Document Type :
Working Paper
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1098/rsos.171582