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Main Authors: Shivshankar, Nithin, Pranav, Pratyush, Natarajan, Vijay, van de Weygaert, Rien, Bos, E G Patrick, Rieder, Steven
Format: Preprint
Published: 2015
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Online Access:https://arxiv.org/abs/1508.00737
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author Shivshankar, Nithin
Pranav, Pratyush
Natarajan, Vijay
van de Weygaert, Rien
Bos, E G Patrick
Rieder, Steven
author_facet Shivshankar, Nithin
Pranav, Pratyush
Natarajan, Vijay
van de Weygaert, Rien
Bos, E G Patrick
Rieder, Steven
contents The large-scale structure of the universe is comprised of virialized blob-like clusters, linear filaments, sheet-like walls and huge near empty three-dimensional voids. Characterizing the large scale universe is essential to our understanding of the formation and evolution of galaxies. The density range of clusters, walls and voids are relatively well separated, when compared to filaments, which span a relatively larger range. The large scale filamentary network thus forms an intricate part of the cosmic web. In this paper, we describe Felix, a topology based framework for visual exploration of filaments in the cosmic web. The filamentary structure is represented by the ascending manifold geometry of the 2-saddles in the Morse-Smale complex of the density field. We generate a hierarchy of Morse-Smale complexes and query for filaments based on the density ranges at the end points of the filaments. The query is processed efficiently over the entire hierarchical Morse-Smale complex, allowing for interactive visualization. We apply Felix to computer simulations based on the heuristic Voronoi kinematic model and the standard $Λ$CDM cosmology, and demonstrate its usefulness through two case studies. First, we extract cosmic filaments within and across cluster like regions in Voronoi kinematic simulation datasets. We demonstrate that we produce similar results to existing structure finders. Filaments that form the spine of the cosmic web, which exist in high density regions in the current epoch, are isolated using Felix. Also, filaments present in void-like regions are isolated and visualized. These filamentary structures are often over shadowed by higher density range filaments and are not easily characterizable and extractable using other filament extraction methodologies.
format Preprint
id arxiv_https___arxiv_org_abs_1508_00737
institution arXiv
publishDate 2015
record_format arxiv
spellingShingle Felix: A Topology based Framework for Visual Exploration of Cosmic Filaments
Shivshankar, Nithin
Pranav, Pratyush
Natarajan, Vijay
van de Weygaert, Rien
Bos, E G Patrick
Rieder, Steven
Cosmology and Nongalactic Astrophysics
Algebraic Topology
Geometric Topology
The large-scale structure of the universe is comprised of virialized blob-like clusters, linear filaments, sheet-like walls and huge near empty three-dimensional voids. Characterizing the large scale universe is essential to our understanding of the formation and evolution of galaxies. The density range of clusters, walls and voids are relatively well separated, when compared to filaments, which span a relatively larger range. The large scale filamentary network thus forms an intricate part of the cosmic web. In this paper, we describe Felix, a topology based framework for visual exploration of filaments in the cosmic web. The filamentary structure is represented by the ascending manifold geometry of the 2-saddles in the Morse-Smale complex of the density field. We generate a hierarchy of Morse-Smale complexes and query for filaments based on the density ranges at the end points of the filaments. The query is processed efficiently over the entire hierarchical Morse-Smale complex, allowing for interactive visualization. We apply Felix to computer simulations based on the heuristic Voronoi kinematic model and the standard $Λ$CDM cosmology, and demonstrate its usefulness through two case studies. First, we extract cosmic filaments within and across cluster like regions in Voronoi kinematic simulation datasets. We demonstrate that we produce similar results to existing structure finders. Filaments that form the spine of the cosmic web, which exist in high density regions in the current epoch, are isolated using Felix. Also, filaments present in void-like regions are isolated and visualized. These filamentary structures are often over shadowed by higher density range filaments and are not easily characterizable and extractable using other filament extraction methodologies.
title Felix: A Topology based Framework for Visual Exploration of Cosmic Filaments
topic Cosmology and Nongalactic Astrophysics
Algebraic Topology
Geometric Topology
url https://arxiv.org/abs/1508.00737