ﻻ يوجد ملخص باللغة العربية
Our knowledge about galaxy evolution comes from transforming observed galaxy properties at different redshifts to co-moving physical scales. This transformation depends on using a cosmological model. Here the effects of unintentional mixing of two different cosmological models on the size evolution of galaxies is studied. As a gedanken experiment, a galaxy of fixed proper size and luminosity is moved across different redshifts. The apparent size of this galaxy is then interpreted with a cosmological model presumed by the observer, which is different compared to the cosmology exhibited by the Universe. In such a case, a spurious size evolution of the galaxy is observed. A galaxy behaving according to the R_h=ct and Neumanns cosmology, when interpreted with the LCDM cosmological model, shows an increase in size by a factor of 1.1 and 1.3 from z=7.5 to z approx. 0, respectively. The apparent size of a galaxy in a static Euclidean cosmology, when interpreted in the LCDM model, shows a factor of 23.8 increase in size between z=7.5 to z approx. 0. This is in close agreement with the observational data with a size increase of a factor of 6.8 between z=3.2 to z approx. 0. Furthermore, using the apparent size data, it is shown that the difference between the derived proper sizes in R_h=ct, Neumanns and LCDM cosmological models are minimal.
We analyse a sample of 52,000 Milky Way (MW) type galaxies drawn from the publicly available galaxy catalogue of the Millennium Simulation with the aim of studying statistically the differences and similarities of their properties in comparison to ou
We study the concentration of dark matter halos and its evolution in N-body simulations of the standard LCDM cosmology. The results presented in this paper are based on 4 large N-body simulations with about 10 billion particles each: the Millennium-I
New statistical properties of dark matter halos in Lagrangian space are presented. Tracing back the dark matter particles constituting bound halos resolved in a series of N-body simulations, we measure quantitatively the correlations of the proto-hal
Interaction of a binary supermassive black hole with stars in a galactic nucleus can result in changes to all the elements of the binarys orbit, including the angles that define its orientation. If the nucleus is rotating, the orientation changes can
We present the results of a set of high resolution chemo-dynamical simulations of dwarf galaxies in a $Lambda$CDM cosmology. Out of an original 3.4 Mpc$^3$/h$^3$ cosmological box, a sample of 27 systems are zoomed-in from z=70 to z=0. Gas and stellar