1,151 research outputs found

    Quest for potentials in the quintessence scenario

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    The time variation of the equation of state ww for quintessence scenario with a scalar field as dark energy is studied up to the third derivative (d3w/da3d^3w/da^3) with respect to the scale factor aa, in order to predict the future observations and specify the scalar potential parameters with the observables. The third derivative of ww for general potential VV is derived and applied to several types of potentials. They are the inverse power-law (V=M4+α/QαV=M^{4+\alpha}/Q^{\alpha}), the exponential (V=M4exp(βM/Q)V=M^4\exp{(\beta M/Q)}), the cosine (V=M4(cos(Q/f)+1)V=M^4(\cos (Q/f)+1)) and the Gaussian types (V=M4exp(Q2/σ2)V=M^4\exp(-Q^2/\sigma^2)), which are prototypical potentials for the freezing and thawing models. If the parameter number for a potential form is n n, it is necessary to find at least for n+2n+2 independent observations to identify the potential form and the evolution of the scalar field (QQ and Q˙ \dot{Q} ). Such observations would be the values of ΩQ,w,dw/da. \Omega_Q, w, dw/da. \cdots , and dwn/dan dw^n/da^n. Since four of the above mentioned potentials have two parameters, it is necessary to calculate the third derivative of ww for them to estimate the predict values. If they are tested observationally, it will be understood whether the dark energy could be described by the scalar field with this potential. Numerical analysis for d3w/da3d^3w/da^3 are made under some specified parameters in the investigated potentials. It becomes possible to distinguish the freezing and thawing modes by the accurate observing dw/dadw/da and d2w/da2d^2w/da^2 in some parameters.Comment: 6 pages, 2 figures. arXiv admin note: text overlap with arXiv:1503.0367

    Dragging force on galaxies due to streaming dark matter

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    It has been reported that galaxies in large regions (approx. 10(exp 2) Mpc), including some clusters of galaxies, may be streaming coherently with velocities up to 600 km/sec or more with respect to the rest frame determined by the microwave background radiation. On the other hand, it is suggested that the dominant mass component of the universe is dark matter. Because we can only speculate the motion of dark matter from the galaxy motions, much attention should be paid to the correlation of velocities between the observed galaxies and cold dark matter. So the authors investigated whether such coherent large-scale streaming velocities are due to dark matter or only to baryonic objects which may be formed by piling up of gases due to some explosive events. It seems that, although each galaxy will not follow the motion of dark matter, clusters of galaxies may represent the velocity field of dark matter. The origin of the velocity field of dark matter would be due to the initial adiabatic perturbations and, in fact, the observed peculiar velocities of clusters are within the allowed region constrained from the isotropy of the microwave background radiation

    Velocity Structure of Jets in Coronal Hole

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    Velocity structures of jets in a coronal hole have been derived for the first time. Hinode observations revealed the existence of many bright points in coronal holes. They are loop-shaped and sometimes associated with coronal jets. Spectra obtained with the Extreme ultraviolet Imaging Spectrometer (EIS) on board Hinode are analyzed to infer Doppler velocity of bright loops and jets in a coronal hole of the north polar region. Elongated jets above bright loops are found to be blue-shifted by 30 km/s at maximum, while foot points of bright loops are red-shifted. Blue-shifts detected in coronal jets are interpreted as upflows produced by magnetic reconnection between emerging flux and the ambient field in the coronal hole.Comment: 11 pages, 7 figures, accepted for publication in PASJ Hinode special issu

    Ultra-rapid earth rotation determination with VLBI during CONT11 and CONT14

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    We present earth rotation results from the ultra-rapid operations during the continuous VLBI campaigns CONT11 and CONT14. The baseline Onsala--Tsukuba, i.e., using two out of the 13 and 17 stations contributing to CONT11 and CONT14, respectively, was used to derive UT1-UTC in ultra-rapid mode during the ongoing campaigns. The latency between a new observation and a new UT1-UTC result was less than 10 min for more than 95{\%} of the observations. The accuracy of the derived ultra-rapid UT1-UTC results is approximately a factor of three worse than results from optimized one-baseline sessions and/or complete analysis of large VLBI networks. This is, however, due to that the one-baseline picked from the CONT campaigns is not optimized for earth rotation determination. Our results prove that the 24/7 operation mode planned for VGOS, the next-generation VLBI system, is possible already today. However, further improvements in data connectivity of stations and correlators as well in the automated analysis are necessary to realize the ambitious VGOS plans
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