Bibcode
DOI
Buitrago, J.; Goicoechea, L. J.; Raposo, A. P.
Referencia bibliográfica
The Astrophysical Journal, Volume 523, Issue 1, pp. 16-23.
Fecha de publicación:
9
1999
Revista
Número de citas
0
Número de citas referidas
0
Descripción
In planar symmetry (one-dimensional peculiar motions), using the
Eulerian perturbative framework and an arbitrary initial profile, we
compute the analytical evolution of the peculiar velocity and the
density contrast up to the fourth order (E1-E4 approximations). From
these results and the exact (Lagrangian) solutions, the accuracy of the
Ej (j<=4) approaches in describing the quasi-linear evolution of some
particular initial profiles (overdense and underdense planar halos) are
studied. For the peculiar velocity, E2 works well. On the contrary, only
E3 and E4 are good descriptors of the quasi-linear regime of the density
contrast in underdensities, and the situation is worse for the density
contrast in overdensities. We have also analyzed the true power of the
Eulerian theory in general planar problems. In spite of the apparent
weakness of the Eulerian scheme in planar problems (in relation to the
Lagrangian formalism, which leads to the exact solution even in the
first-order approximation), we showed that this formalism is capable of
yielding the exact solution to some plane-symmetric gravitational
instability problems. For the E1-E4 approximations, the local relation
agrees with the exact one. Moreover, for the evolution of planar cores
(a top-hat initial profile or the central shell of an arbitrary
inhomogeneity), it is possible to make, in a relatively simple way, a
superapproach E∞, which leads to the exact solution (peculiar
velocity and density contrast). We observe finally that the Eulerian
formalism may, however, be a poor tracer for the evolution of planar
halos. Only when a superapproach is viable does the Eulerian theory
rival the Lagrangian one.