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We consider the growth of primordial dark matter halos seeded by three crossed initial sine waves of various amplitudes. Using a Lagrangian treatment of cosmological gravitational dynamics, we examine the convergence properties of a high-order perturbative expansion in the vicinity of shell-crossing, by comparing the analytical results with state-of-the-art high resolution Vlasov-Poisson simulations. Based on a quantitative exploration of parameter space, we study explicitly for the first time the convergence speed of the perturbative series, and find, in agreement with intuition, that it slows down when going from quasi one-dimensional initial conditions (one sine wave dominating) to quasi triaxial symmetry (three sine waves with same amplitude). In most cases, the system structure at collapse time is, as expected, very similar to what is obtained with simple one-dimensional dynamics, except in the quasi-triaxial regime, where the phase-space sheet presents a velocity spike. In all cases, the perturbative series exhibits a generic convergence behavior as fast as an exponential of a power-law of the order of the expansion, allowing one to numerically extrapolate it to infinite order. The results of such an extrapolation agree remarkably well with the simulations, even at shell-crossing.
We develop a new perturbation theory (PT) treatment that can describe gravitational dynamics of large-scale structure after shell-crossing in the one-dimensional cosmological case. Starting with cold initial conditions, the motion of matter distribut
We present the one-loop 2-point function of biased tracers in redshift space computed with Lagrangian perturbation theory, including a full resummation of both long-wavelength (infrared) displacements and associated velocities. The resulting model ac
Cosmological perturbation theory is crucial for our understanding of the universe. The linear theory has been well understood for some time, however developing and applying the theory beyond linear order is currently at the forefront of research in t
We compare and contrast two different metric based formulations of non- linear cosmological perturbation theory: the MW2009 approach in [K. A. Malik and D. Wands, Phys. Rept. 475 (2009), 1.] following Bardeen and the recent approach of the paper KN20
We study analytically the collapse of an initially smooth, cold, self-gravitating collisionless system in one dimension. The system is described as a central S shape in phase-space surrounded by a nearly stationary halo acting locally like a harmonic