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The evolution of a planar perturbation in a Einstein-de Sitter Universe is studied using a previously introduced Lagrangian scheme. An approximate discrete dynamical system is derived, which describes the mass agglomeration process qualitatively. Quantitative predictions for the late density profile are obtained therefrom, and validated by numerical simulations. The main result is a scaling regime for the density profile of a collapsing object of mass $M$ around cosmological coordinate $r^*$, $rho(r)sim frac{M}{d}(frac{|r-r^*|}{d})^{-{1/4}}$. The characteristic scale of the agglomeration, $dsim (t/t_0)^{{4/9}}$, is an increasing function of cosmological time $t$. The major part of the mass hence always lies in a region with decreasing mass density. This shows that one-dimensional self-gravitating motion is not sufficient to effectively drive structure formation in an Einstein-de Sitter Universe. These results are compared with analogous investigations for the adhesion model (Burgers equation with positive viscosity), where the agglomeration is faster, and one-dimensional dynamics is effective. We further study the mutual motion of two mass agglomerations, and show that they oscillate around each other for long times, like two ``heavy particles. Individual particles in the two agglomerations do not mix effectively on the time scale of the interagglomeration motion.
The present day universe consists of galaxies, galaxy clusters, one-dimensional filaments and two-dimensional sheets or pancakes, all of which combine to form the cosmic web. The so called Zeldovich pancakes, are very difficult to observe, because th
If the large scale structure of the Universe was created, even partially, via Zeldovich pancakes, than the fluctuations of the CMB radiation should be formed due to bulk comptonization of black body spectrum on the contracting pancake. Approximate fo
One of the components of the cosmic web are sheets, which are commonly referred to as Zeldovich pancakes. These are structures which have only collapsed along one dimension, as opposed to filaments or galaxies and cluster, which have collapsed along
Network topologies can be non-trivial, due to the complex underlying behaviors that form them. While past research has shown that some processes on networks may be characterized by low-order statistics describing nodes and their neighbors, such as de
We present a new technique which allows the fully {em ab initio} calculation of the chemical potential of a substitutional impurity in a high-temperature crystal, including harmonic and anharmonic lattice vibrations. The technique uses the combinatio