Filamentary superclustering in a universe dominated by cold dark matter

Astronomy and Astrophysics – Astrophysics

Scientific paper

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Astronomical Models, Dark Matter, Galactic Clusters, Galactic Evolution, Cold Plasmas, Computerized Simulation, Power Spectra, Star Distribution

Scientific paper

The relative orientations of neighboring clusters of galaxies in a universe dominated by cold dark matter (CDM) are examined using N-body simulations. A clear tendency is found for the major axes of neighboring clusters to be aligned for separations up to 10-15/sq h Mpc when all clusters pairs are included. When only those clusters which reside within superclusters are considered, alignments are found over even larger scales, up to about 30/sq h Mpc. The orientations of cluster minor axes also provide supporting evidence of the presence of filamentary rather than sheetlike features in the large-scale mass distributions. These findings agree well with observational results. The results indicate that a CDM-dominated universe can account for many of the observed features of the large-scale structure.

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