doctoralThesis
Teoria e aplicações do gás relativístico reduzido na cosmologia
Fecha
2020-03-06Registro en:
SILVA NETO, Gival Pordeus da. Teoria e aplicações do gás relativístico reduzido na cosmologia. 2020. 170f. Tese (Doutorado em Física) - Centro de Ciências Exatas e da Terra, Universidade Federal do Rio Grande do Norte, Natal, 2020.
Autor
Silva Neto, Gival Pordeus da
Resumen
The Reduced Relativistic Gas (RRG) is a simplified version of the ideal relativistic
gas, where it is assumed that all particles have the same momentum magnitude. Although
this is a very idealized situation, the resulting model preserves the phenomenology of the
Maxwell-Boltzmann distribution and, in some situations, can be described as a perfect fluid,
without introducing large errors. The perfect fluid description of RRG model was already
used to study the warmness of dark matter, massive neutrinos and interaction of baryons and
photons before recombination, showing very good agreement with previous works based on
the full Einstein-Boltzmann system of equations. In order to understand these results and
construct a more general and formal framework for RRG, we develop a theoretical description
of first-order cosmological perturbations of RRG, based on a distribution function which
encodes the simplifying assumption that all particles have the same momentum magnitude.
From this function, we derive the full set of Einstein-Boltzmann equations for RRG and study
quantities beyond the perfect fluid approximation. We derive an analytical expression that
relates the parameter of warmness to the mass of the particle and we also explicitly verify
that the non-relativistic and ultra-relativistic limits are recovered. Furthermore, using RRG to
describe warm dark matter (WDM), we show that for particles with m ∼ keV, the perfect fluid
approximation is valid on scales with k < 10 h/Mpc, for most of the universe evolution. We
also determined the initial conditions for RRG in the early universe and studied the evolution
of the potential in a toy model composed only by RRG. Finally, we study in a semi-analytical
way the sub-horizon evolution of the density contrast of the WDM in a model with WDM,
radiation, and Λ, where the WDM is described by the RRG.