Gravitational Stability and Bulk Cosmology
Abstract
We present a discussion of the effects induced by bulk viscosity either on the very early Universe stability and on the dynamics associated to the extreme gravitational collapse of a gas cloud. In both cases the viscosity coefficient is related to the energy density via a power-law of the form (where ) and the behavior of the density contrast in analyzed. In the first case, matter filling the isotropic and homogeneous background is described by an ultra-relativistic equation of state. The analytic expression of the density contrast shows that its growth is suppressed forward in time as soon as overcomes a critical value. On the other hand, in such a regime, the asymptotic approach to the initial singularity admits an unstable collapsing picture. In the second case, we investigate the top-down fragmentation process of an uniform and spherically symmetric gas cloud within the framework of a Newtonian approach, including the negative pressure contribution associated to the bulk viscous phenomenology. In the extreme regime toward the singularity, we show that the density contrast associated to an adiabatic-like behavior of the gas (which is identified by a particular range of the politropic index) acquire, for sufficiently large viscous contributions, a vanishing behavior which prevents the formation of sub-structures. Such a feature is not present in the isothermal-like collapse. We also emphasize that in the adiabatic-like case bulk viscosity is also responsible for the appearance of a threshold scale (equivalent to a Jeans length) beyond which perturbations begin to increase.
Cite
@article{arxiv.0710.0313,
title = {Gravitational Stability and Bulk Cosmology},
author = {Nakia Carlevaro and Giovanni Montani},
journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:0710.0313},
year = {2009}
}
Comments
13 pages, no figure