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| The '''Press–Schechter formalism''' is a [[mathematical model]] for predicting the number of objects (such as [[galaxies]] or [[galaxy clusters]]) of a certain mass within a given volume of the Universe. It was described in a famous [[Academic paper|paper]] by [[William H. Press]] and [[Paul L. Schechter|Paul Schechter]] in 1974.<ref>[http://adsabs.harvard.edu/abs/1974ApJ...187..425P Formation of Galaxies and Clusters of Galaxies by Self-Similar Gravitational Condensation], W.H. Press, P. Schechter, 1974</ref>
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| ==Background==
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| In the context of [[Dark matter|cold dark matter]] cosmological models,
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| perturbations on all scales are imprinted on the universe at very early times,
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| for example by quantum fluctuations during an [[Inflationary cosmology|inflationary era]].
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| Later, as radiation redshifts away, these become mass perturbations, and they
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| start to grow linearly. Only long after that, starting with small mass scales
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| and advancing over time to larger mass scales, do the perturbations actually
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| collapse to form (for example) galaxies or clusters of galaxies, in so-called
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| hierarchical structure formation (see [[Physical cosmology]]).
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| Press and Schechter observed that the fraction of mass in collapsed objects
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| more massive than some mass M is related to the fraction of volume samples
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| in which the smoothed initial density fluctuations are above some
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| density threshold. This yields a formula for the mass function (distribution
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| of masses) of objects at any given time.
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| ==Result==
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| The Press–Schechter formalism predicts that the number of objects with mass between <math>M</math> and <math>M+dM</math> is:
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| :<math>N(M)dM = \frac{1}{\sqrt{\pi}}\left(1+\frac{n}{3}\right)\frac{\bar{\rho}}{M^2}\left(\frac{M}{M^*}\right)^{\left(3+n\right)/6}\exp\left(-\left(\frac{M}{M^*}\right)^{\left(3+n\right)/3}\right)dM</math> | |
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| where <math>\bar{\rho}</math> is the mean (baryonic and dark) matter density of the universe, <math>n</math> is the index of the power spectrum of the fluctuations in the early universe <math>P(k)\propto k^n</math>, and <math>M^*</math> is a critical mass above which structures will form.
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| Qualitatively, the prediction is that the mass distribution is a power law for
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| small masses, with an exponential cutoff above some characteristic mass that
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| increases with time. Such functions had previously been noted by Schechter
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| as observed [[Luminosity function (astronomy)|luminosity functions]],
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| and are now known as Schechter luminosity functions. The Press-Schechter
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| formalism provided the first quantitative model for how such functions might
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| arise.
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| ==References==
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| {{reflist}}
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| {{DEFAULTSORT:Press-Schechter formalism}}
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| [[Category:Astrophysics]]
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| [[Category:Mathematical modeling]]
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| {{Physics-stub}}
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Hello!
I'm French male :D.
I really like Figure skating!
Stop by my web blog: Дополнительная информация