Damped lyman-alpha systems versus cold + hot dark matter
- 1 May 1995
- journal article
- Published by American Astronomical Society in The Astrophysical Journal
- Vol. 444, 1-14
- https://doi.org/10.1086/175578
Abstract
Although the Cold + Hot Dark Matter (CHDM) cosmology provides perhaps the best fit of any model to all the available data at the current epoch, CHDM produces structure at relatively low redshifts and thus could be ruled out if there were evidence for formation of massive objects at high redshifts. Damped Ly$alpha$ systems are abundant in quasar absorption spectra and thus provide possibly the most significant evidence for early structure formation, and thus perhaps the most stringent constraint on CHDM. Using the numbers of halos in N-body simulations to normalize Press-Schechter estimates of the number densities of protogalaxies as a function of redshift, we find that CHDM with $Omega_c/Omega_
u/Omega_b = 0.6/0.3/0.1$ is compatible with the damped Ly$alpha$ data at $le 2.5$, but that it is probably incompatible with the limited $z>3$ damped Ly$alpha$ data. The situation is uncertain because there is very little data for $z>3$, and also it is unclear whether all damped Ly$alpha$ systems are associated with collapsed protogalaxies. The predictions of CHDM are quite sensitive to the hot (neutrino) fraction, and we find that $Omega_c/Omega_
u/Omega_b = 0.675/0.25/0.075$ is compatible even with the $z>3$ data. This corresponds to lowering the neutrino mass from 6.8 to 5.7 eV, for $H_0=50kmsMpc$. In CHDM, the higher redshift damped Ly$alpha$ systems are predicted to have lower masses, which can be checked by measuring the velocity widths of the associated metal line systems.Comment: submitted to ApJ 16 pages including 3 figures, uuencoded compressed postscript, SCIPP 94/0
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