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Dive into the research topics where Sean February is active.

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Featured researches published by Sean February.


Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society | 2010

Rendering dark energy void

Sean February; Julien Larena; Mathew Smith; Chris Clarkson

Dark energy observations may be explained within general relativity using an inhomogeneous Hubble-scale depression in the matter density and accompanying curvature, which evolves naturally out of an Einstein―de Sitter (EdS) model. We present a simple parametrization of a void which can reproduce concordance model distances to arbitrary accuracy, but can parametrize away from this to give a smooth density profile everywhere. We show how the Flubble constant is not just a nuisance parameter in inhomogeneous models because it affects the shape of the distance-redshift relation. Independent Hubble-rate data from age estimates can, in principle, serve to break the degeneracy between concordance and void models, but the data are not yet able to achieve this. Using the latest Constitution supernova data set, we show that robust limits can be placed on the size of a void which is roughly independent of its shape. However, the sharpness of the profile at the origin cannot be well constrained due to supernova being dominated by peculiar velocities in the local universe. We illustrate our results using some recently proposed diagnostics for the Friedmann models.


Journal of Cosmology and Astroparticle Physics | 2009

Perturbation theory in Lemaȋtre-Tolman-Bondi cosmology

Chris Clarkson; Timothy Clifton; Sean February

The Lemaȋtre-Tolman-Bondi solution has received much attention as a possible alternative to Dark Energy, as it is able to account for the apparent acceleration of the Universe without any exotic matter content. However, in order to make rigorous comparisons between these models and cosmological observations, such as the integrated Sachs-Wolfe effect, baryon acoustic oscillations and the observed matter power spectrum, it is absolutely necessary to have a proper understanding of the linear perturbation theory about them. Here we present this theory in a fully general, and gauge-invariant form. It is shown that scalar, vector and tensor perturbations interact, and that the natural gauge invariant variables in Lemaȋtre-Tolman-Bondi cosmology do not correspond straightforwardly to the usual Bardeen variables, in the limit of spatial homogeneity. We therefore construct new variables that reduce to pure scalar, vector and tensor modes in this limit.


Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society | 2016

nIFTy galaxy cluster simulations – I. Dark matter and non-radiative models

Federico Sembolini; Gustavo Yepes; Frazer R. Pearce; Alexander Knebe; Scott T. Kay; Chris Power; Weiguang Cui; Alexander M. Beck; Stefano Borgani; Claudio Dalla Vecchia; Romeel Davé; Pascal J. Elahi; Sean February; Shuiyao Huang; Alex Hobbs; Neal Katz; Erwin T. Lau; Ian G. McCarthy; Guiseppe Murante; Daisuke Nagai; Kaylea Nelson; Richard D. A. Newton; Valentin Perret; Ewald Puchwein; Justin I. Read; A. Saro; Joop Schaye; Romain Teyssier; Robert J. Thacker

We have simulated the formation of a galaxy cluster in a Ʌ cold dark matter universe using 13 different codes modelling only gravity and non-radiative hydrodynamics (RAMSES, ART, AREPO, HYDRA and nine incarnations of GADGET). This range of codes includes particle-based, moving and fixed mesh codes as well as both Eulerian and Lagrangian fluid schemes. The various GADGET implementations span classic and modern smoothed particle hydrodynamics (SPH) schemes. The goal of this comparison is to assess the reliability of cosmological hydrodynamical simulations of clusters in the simplest astrophysically relevant case, that in which the gas is assumed to be non-radiative. We compare images of the cluster at z = 0, global properties such as mass and radial profiles of various dynamical and thermodynamical quantities. The underlying gravitational framework can be aligned very accurately for all the codes allowing a detailed investigation of the differences that develop due to the various gas physics implementations employed. As expected, the mesh-based codes RAMSES, ART and AREPO form extended entropy cores in the gas with rising central gas temperatures. Those codes employing classic SPH schemes show falling entropy profiles all the way into the very centre with correspondingly rising density profiles and central temperature inversions. We show that methods with modern SPH schemes that allow entropy mixing span the range between these two extremes and the latest SPH variants produce gas entropy profiles that are essentially indistinguishable from those obtained with grid-based methods.


Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society | 2016

nIFTy galaxy cluster simulations – IV. Quantifying the influence of baryons on halo properties

Weiguang Cui; Chris Power; Alexander Knebe; Scott T. Kay; Federico Sembolini; Pascal J. Elahi; Gustavo Yepes; Frazer R. Pearce; Daniel Cunnama; Alexander M. Beck; Claudio Dalla Vecchia; Romeel Davé; Sean February; Shuiyao Huang; Alex Hobbs; Neal Katz; Ian G. McCarthy; Giuseppe Murante; Valentin Perret; Ewald Puchwein; Justin I. Read; A. Saro; Romain Teyssier; Robert J. Thacker

Building on the initial results of the nIFTy simulated galaxy cluster comparison, we compare and contrast the impact of baryonic physics with a single massive galaxy cluster, run with 11 state-of-the-art codes, spanning adaptive mesh, moving mesh, classic and modern smoothed particle hydrodynamics (SPH) approaches. For each code represented we have a dark-matter-only (DM) and non-radiative (NR) version of the cluster, as well as a full physics (FP) version for a subset of the codes. We compare both radial mass and kinematic profiles, as well as global measures of the cluster (e.g. concentration, spin, shape), in the NR and FP runs with that in the DM runs. Our analysis reveals good consistency ⪅20 per cent) between global properties of the cluster predicted by different codes when integrated quantities are measured within the virial radius R200. However, we see larger differences for quantities within R2500, especially in the FP runs. The radial profiles reveal a diversity, especially in the cluster centre, between the NR runs, which can be understood straightforwardly from the division of codes into classic SPH and non-classic SPH (including the modern SPH, adaptive and moving mesh codes); and between the FP runs, which can also be understood broadly from the division of codes into those that include active galactic nucleus feedback and those that do not. The variation with respect to the median is much larger in the FP runs with different baryonic physics prescriptions than in the NR runs with different hydrodynamics solvers.


Journal of Cosmology and Astroparticle Physics | 2013

Galaxy correlations and the BAO in a void universe: structure formation as a test of the Copernican Principle

Sean February; Chris Clarkson; Roy Maartens

A suggested solution to the dark energy problem is the void model, where accelerated expansion is replaced by Hubble-scale inhomogeneity. In these models, density perturbations grow on a radially inhomogeneous background. This large scale inhomogeneity distorts the spherical Baryon Acoustic Oscillation feature into an ellipsoid which implies that the bump in the galaxy correlation function occurs at different scales in the radial and transverse correlation functions. We compute these for the first time, under the approximation that curvature gradients do not couple the scalar modes to vector and tensor modes. The radial and transverse correlation functions are very different from those of the concordance model, even when the models have the same average BAO scale. This implies that if void models are fine-tuned to satisfy average BAO data, there is enough extra information in the correlation functions to distinguish a void model from the concordance model. We expect these new features to remain when the full perturbation equations are solved, which means that the radial and transverse galaxy correlation functions can be used as a powerful test of the Copernican Principle.


Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society | 2016

nIFTy galaxy cluster simulations - II. Radiative models

Federico Sembolini; Pascal J. Elahi; Frazer R. Pearce; Chris Power; Alexander Knebe; Scott T. Kay; Weiguang Cui; Gustavo Yepes; Alexander M. Beck; Stefano Borgani; Daniel Cunnama; Romeel Davé; Sean February; Shuiyao Huang; Neal Katz; Ian G. McCarthy; Giuseppe Murante; Richard D. A. Newton; Valentin Perret; Ewald Puchwein; A. Saro; Joop Schaye; Romain Teyssier

We have simulated the formation of a massive galaxy cluster (M


Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society | 2016

nIFTY galaxy cluster simulations – III. The similarity and diversity of galaxies and subhaloes

Pascal J. Elahi; Alexander Knebe; Frazer R. Pearce; Chris Power; Gustavo Yepes; Weiguang Cui; Daniel Cunnama; Scott T. Kay; Federico Sembolini; Alexander M. Beck; Romeel Davé; Sean February; Shuiyao Huang; Neal Katz; Ian G. McCarthy; Giuseppe Murante; Valentin Perret; Ewald Puchwein; A. Saro; Romain Teyssier

_{200}^{\rm crit}


Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society | 2017

nIFTy galaxy cluster simulations – V. Investigation of the cluster infall region

Jake Arthur; Frazer R. Pearce; Meghan E. Gray; Pascal J. Elahi; Alexander Knebe; Alexander M. Beck; Weiguang Cui; Daniel Cunnama; Romeel Davé; Sean February; Shuiyao Huang; Neal Katz; Scott T. Kay; Ian G. McCarthy; Giuseppe Murante; Valentin Perret; Chris Power; Ewald Puchwein; A. Saro; Federico Sembolini; Romain Teyssier; Gustavo Yepes

= 1.1


Classical and Quantum Gravity | 2014

Evolution of linear perturbations in spherically symmetric dust spacetimes

Sean February; Julien Larena; Chris Clarkson; Denis Pollney

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TOWARDS NEW PARADIGMS: PROCEEDING OF THE SPANISH RELATIVITY MEETING 2011 | 2012

Baryon acoustic oscillations in a cosmic void

Sean February; Chris Clarkson; Roy Maartens

10

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Romeel Davé

University of the Western Cape

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Chris Power

University of Western Australia

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Pascal J. Elahi

University of Western Australia

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Weiguang Cui

University of Western Australia

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Alexander Knebe

Autonomous University of Madrid

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Federico Sembolini

Autonomous University of Madrid

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Gustavo Yepes

Autonomous University of Madrid

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