We present measurements of the number density of voids in the dark matter distribution from a series of N-body simulations of a λ cold dark matter cosmology. We define voids as spherical regions of ρv = 0.2ρm around density minima in order to relate our results to the predicted abundances using the excursion set formalism. Using a linear underdensity of δv = -2.7, from a spherical evolution model, we find that a volume-conserving model, which does not conserve number density in the mapping from the linear to non-linear regime, matches the measured abundance to within 16 per cent for a range of void radii 1 < r(h-1 Mpc) < 15. This model fixes the volume fraction of the universe which is in voids and assumes that voids of a similar size merge as they expand by a factor of 1.7 to achieve a non-linear density of ρv = 0.2ρm today. We find that the model of Sheth and van de Weygaert for the number density of voids greatly overpredicts the abundances over the same range of scales. We find that the volume-conserving model works well at matching the number density of voids measured from the simulations at higher redshifts, z = 0.5 and 1, as well as correctly predicting the abundances to within 25 per cent in a simulation of a matter dominated ωm = 1 universe. We examine the abundance of voids in the halo distribution and find fewer small, r < 10 h-1 Mpc, voids and many more large, r > 10 h-1 Mpc, voids compared to the dark matter. These results indicate that voids identified in the halo or galaxy distribution are related to the underlying void distribution in the dark matter in a complicated way which merits further study if voids are to be used as a precision probe of cosmology. © 2013 The Authors. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the Royal Astronomical Society.
CITATION STYLE
Jennings, E., Li, Y., & Hu, W. (2013). The abundance of voids and the excursion set formalism. Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society, 434(3), 2167–2181. https://doi.org/10.1093/mnras/stt1169
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