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This thesis addresses two very different but equally important
topics in the very broad fields of astrophysics and cosmology: (I)
the generation of cosmological magnetic fields and (II)
gravitational fragmentation of the Cosmic Web. All mathematical
developments are completed by illuminating physical
interpretations, and the thesis, which is guided by existing
observations, is purely theoretical. In part I, the author further
develops a magnetogenesis model proposed in the literature,
providing an unprecedented level of physical understanding. He
demonstrates that the physics of photoionisation is very likely to
have premagnetised, at a relevant level, the entire Universe at the
early epoch of the formation of the first luminous sources. In part
II, the author adapts the tools of plasma spectral theory to the
context of gravitational instability of the baryonic gas within the
stratified structures of the Cosmic Web. He skillfully derives the
wave equation governing the growth of perturbations and explores
various equilibrium configurations, in planar and cylindrical
geometries characteristic of cosmic walls and filaments, for
isothermal and polytropic conditions, with or without an external
gravitational background. Clearly structured and written in
pedagogical style, this outstanding thesis puts the results into
perspective and highlights the merits and limitations of the
various approaches explored.
This thesis addresses two very different but equally important
topics in the very broad fields of astrophysics and cosmology: (I)
the generation of cosmological magnetic fields and (II)
gravitational fragmentation of the Cosmic Web. All mathematical
developments are completed by illuminating physical
interpretations, and the thesis, which is guided by existing
observations, is purely theoretical. In part I, the author further
develops a magnetogenesis model proposed in the literature,
providing an unprecedented level of physical understanding. He
demonstrates that the physics of photoionisation is very likely to
have premagnetised, at a relevant level, the entire Universe at the
early epoch of the formation of the first luminous sources. In part
II, the author adapts the tools of plasma spectral theory to the
context of gravitational instability of the baryonic gas within the
stratified structures of the Cosmic Web. He skillfully derives the
wave equation governing the growth of perturbations and explores
various equilibrium configurations, in planar and cylindrical
geometries characteristic of cosmic walls and filaments, for
isothermal and polytropic conditions, with or without an external
gravitational background. Clearly structured and written in
pedagogical style, this outstanding thesis puts the results into
perspective and highlights the merits and limitations of the
various approaches explored.
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Nadine Gordimer
Paperback
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R367
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