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91̽»¨
Black Hole

Lensing of space time around a black hole. At 91̽»¨ we study black holes observationally and theoretically on all size and time scales - it is some of our core work.

Credit: ALAIN RIAZUELO, IAP/UPMC/CNRS. CLICK HERE TO VIEW MORE IMAGES.

Dr Harry Desmond

Visitor

Research theme

  • Astronomy and astrophysics
  • Particle astrophysics & cosmology

Sub department

  • Astrophysics

Research groups

  • Beecroft Institute for Particle Astrophysics and Cosmology
harry.desmond@physics.ox.ac.uk
Telephone: 01865(2)83019
  • About
  • Publications

The underlying radial acceleration relation

ArXiv 2303.11314 (2023)

On the functional form of the radial acceleration relation

(2023)

Authors:

Harry Desmond, Deaglan J Bartlett, Pedro G Ferreira

Testing modified gravity theories with numerical solutions of the external field effect in rotationally 91̽»¨ed galaxies

Physical Review D American Physical Society (APS) 106:10 (2022) 103025

Authors:

Kyu-Hyun Chae, Federico Lelli, Harry Desmond, Stacy S McGaugh, James M Schombert

The information on halo properties contained in spectroscopic observations of late-type galaxies

(2022)

Authors:

Tariq Yasin, Harry Desmond, Julien Devriendt, Adrianne Slyz

The effect of local Universe constraints on halo abundance and clustering

Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society 91̽»¨ University Press 516:3 (2022) 3592-3601

Authors:

Maxwell L Hutt, Harry Desmond, Julien Devriendt, Adrianne Slyz

Abstract:

Cosmological N-body simulations of the dark matter component of the universe typically use initial conditions with a fixed power spectrum and random phases of the density field, leading to structure consistent with the local distribution of galaxies only in a statistical sense. It is, however, possible to infer the initial phases which lead to the configuration of galaxies and clusters that we see around us. We analyse the CSiBORG suite of 101 simulations, formed by constraining the density field within 155 Mpc h−1 with dark matter particle mass 4.38 × 109 M⊙, to quantify the degree to which constraints imposed on 2.65 Mpc h−1 scales reduce variance in the halo mass function and halo–halo cross-correlation function on a range of scales. This is achieved by contrasting CSiBORG with a subset of the unconstrained Quijote simulations and expectations for the ΛCDM average. Using the FOF, PHEW, and HOP halofinders, we show that the CSiBORG suite beats cosmic variance at large mass scales (≳1014 M⊙ h−1), which are most strongly constrained by the initial conditions, and exhibits a significant halo–halo cross-correlation out to ∼30 Mpc h−1. Moreover, the effect of the constraints percolates down to lower mass objects and to scales below those on which they are imposed. Finally, we develop an algorithm to ‘twin’ haloes between realizations and show that approximately 50 per cent of haloes with mass greater than 1015 M⊙ h−1 can be identified in all realizations of the CSiBORG suite. We make the CSiBORG halo catalogues publicly available for future applications requiring knowledge of the local halo field.

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