Cosmography and dynamic of the Local Universe

Invited Talk: Noam Libeskind

What does the Universe around us look like and how do we map it? Galaxies and dark matter are not distributed uniformly but instead form a complicated multi scale network known as the cosmic web. It is notoriously difficult to map such a complicated structure. For one, galactic light is a biased tracer of matter. It’s susceptible to a myriad of optical effects including various forms of distortion. Secondly, the measurements themselves are error prone and it is a challenge to finesse a signal out of a sea of noise. Last but not least, the universe is expanding making it conceptually difficult to map a dynamic topography. I will describe how maps of the cosmic web can be made based on incomplete, heterogeneous and error filled data. I will describe how some of the features we see in the cosmographic maps are mirrored in the galaxy distribution and how these cosmological reconstructions can be used to run constrained simulations of this – not a generic – universe. Time permitting, I will also show the first ever evidence that cosmic filaments spin, thereby demonstrating that angular momentum and vorticity can be generated on unprecedented scales.

Event Timeslots (1)

Thu
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