1,434 research outputs found
CMB Anisotropy Induced by Cosmic Strings on Angular Scales
We have computed an estimate of the angular power spectrum of the Cosmic
Microwave Background (CMB) induced by cosmic strings on angular scales , using a numerical simulation of a cosmic string network; and decomposed
this pattern into scalar, vector, and tensor parts. We find no evidence for
strong acoustic oscillations in the scalar anisotropy but rather a broad peak.
The anisotropies from vector modes dominate except on very small angular scales
while the tensor anisotropies are sub-dominant on all angular scales. The
anisotropies generated after recombination are even more important than in
adiabatic models. We expect that these qualitative features are robust to the
varying of cosmological parameters, a study which has not yet been done.Comment: 4 pages, 2 figure
Non-Gaussian bubbles in the sky
We point out a possible generation mechanism of non-Gaussian bubbles in the
sky due to bubble nucleation in the early universe. We consider a curvaton
scenario for inflation and assume that the curvaton field phi, whose energy
density is subdominant during inflation but which is responsible for the
curvature perturbation of the universe, is coupled to another field sigma which
undergoes false vacuum decay through quantum tunneling. For this model, we
compute the skewness of the curvaton fluctuations due to its interaction with
sigma during tunneling, that is, on the background of an instanton solution
that describes false vacuum decay. We find that the resulting skewness of the
curvaton can become large in the spacetime region inside the bubble. We then
compute the corresponding skewness in the statistical distribution of the
cosmic microwave background (CMB) temperature fluctuations. We find a
non-vanishing skewness in a bubble-shaped region in the sky. It can be large
enough to be detected in the near future, and if detected it will bring us
invaluable information about the physics in the early universe.Comment: 6 pages, 6 figure
Graviton Production in Elliptical and Hyperbolic Universes
The problem of cosmological graviton creation for homogeneous and isotropic
universes with elliptical (\vae =+1) and hyperbolical (\vae =-1) geometries
is addressed. The gravitational wave equation is established for a
self-gravitating fluid satisfying the barotropic equation of state , which is the source of the Einstein's equations plus a cosmological
-term. The time dependent part of this equation is exactly solved in
terms of hypergeometric functions for any value of and spatial
curvature \vae. An expression representing an adiabatic vacuum state is then
obtained in terms of associated Legendre functions whenever , where n is an integer. This includes most
cases of physical interest such as . The mechanism of
graviton creation is reviewed and the Bogoliubov coefficients related to
transitions between arbitrary cosmic eras are also explicitly evaluated.Comment: 25 pages, uses REVTE
Cytokine-facilitated transduction leads to low-level engraftment in nonablated hosts
Using a murine bone marrow transplantation model, we evaluated the long-term engraftment of retrovirally transduced bone marrow cells in nonmyeloablated hosts. Male bone marrow was stimulated in a cocktail of interleukin-3 (IL-3), IL-6, IL-11, and stem cell factor (SCF) for 48 hours, then cocultured on the retroviral producer line MDR18.1 for an additional 24 hours. Functional transduction of hematopoietic progenitors was detected in vitro by reverse transcriptase-polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR) amplification of multiple drug resistance 1 (MDR1) mRNA from high proliferative potential-colony forming cell (HPP-CFC) colonies. After retroviral transduction, male bone marrow cells were injected into nonablated female mice. Transplant recipients received three TAXOL (Bristol-Myers, Princeton, NJ) injections (10 mg/kg) over a 14-month period. Transplant recipient tissues were analyzed by Southern blot and fluorescence in situ hybridization for Y-chromosome-specific sequences and showed donor cell engraftment of approximately 9%. However, polymerase chain reaction amplification of DNAs from bone marrow, spleen, and peripheral blood showed no evidence of the transduced MDR1 gene. RT-PCR analysis of total bone marrow RNA showed that transcripts from the MDR1 gene were present in a fraction of the engrafted donor cells. These data show functional transfer of the MDR1 gene into nonmyeloablated murine hosts. However, the high rates of in vitro transduction into HPP-CFC, coupled with the low in vivo engraftment rate of donor cells containing the MDR1 gene, suggest that the majority of stem cells that incorporated the retroviral construct did not stably engraft in the host. Based on additional studies that indicate that ex vivo culture of bone marrow induces an engraftment defect concomitantly with progression of cells through S phase, we propose that the cell cycle transit required for proviral integration reduces or impairs the ability of transduced cells to stably engraft
Reconstructing Projected Matter Density from Cosmic Microwave Background
Gravitational lensing distorts the cosmic microwave background (CMB)
anisotropies and imprints a characteristic pattern onto it. The distortions
depend on the projected matter density between today and redshift . In this paper we develop a method for a direct reconstruction of the
projected matter density from the CMB anisotropies. This reconstruction is
obtained by averaging over quadratic combinations of the derivatives of CMB
field. We test the method using simulations and show that it can successfully
recover projected density profile of a cluster of galaxies if there are
measurable anisotropies on scales smaller than the characteristic cluster size.
In the absence of sufficient small scale power the reconstructed maps have low
signal to noise on individual structures, but can give a positive detection of
the power spectrum or when cross correlated with other maps of large scale
structure. We develop an analytic method to reconstruct the power spectrum
including the effects of noise and beam smoothing. Tests with Monte Carlo
simulations show that we can recover the input power spectrum both on large and
small scales, provided that we use maps with sufficiently low noise and high
angular resolution.Comment: 21 pages, 9 figures, submitted to PR
Doppler peaks from active perturbations
We examine how the qualitative structure of the Doppler peaks in the angular
power spectrum of the cosmic microwave anisotropy depends on the fundamental
nature of the perturbations which produced them. The formalism of Hu and
Sugiyama is extended to treat models with cosmic defects. We discuss how
perturbations can be ``active'' or ``passive'' and ``incoherent'' or
``coherent'', and show how causality and scale invariance play rather different
roles in these various cases. We find that the existence of secondary Doppler
peaks and the rough placing of the primary peak unambiguously reflect these
basic properties.Comment: uufile, 8pages, 3 figures. Now available at
http://euclid.tp.ph/Papers/index.html; Changes: URL added, Eqn. (8) expanded,
grant numbers include
Direct Signature of Evolving Gravitational Potential from Cosmic Microwave Background
We show that time dependent gravitational potential can be directly detected
from the cosmic microwave background (CMB) anisotropies. The signature can be
measured by cross-correlating the CMB with the projected density field
reconstructed from the weak lensing distortions of the CMB itself. The
cross-correlation gives a signal whenever there is a time dependent
gravitational potential. This method traces dark matter directly and has a well
defined redshift distribution of the window projecting over the density
perturbations, thereby avoiding the problems plaguing other proposed
cross-correlations. We show that both MAP and Planck will be able to probe this
effect for observationally relevant curvature and cosmological constant models,
which will provide additional constraints on the cosmological parameters.Comment: 4 pages, 2 figures. Submitted to PR
Testing the tidal alignment model of galaxy intrinsic alignment
Weak gravitational lensing has become a powerful probe of large-scale
structure and cosmological parameters. Precision weak lensing measurements
require an understanding of the intrinsic alignment of galaxy ellipticities,
which can in turn inform models of galaxy formation. It is hypothesized that
elliptical galaxies align with the background tidal field and that this
alignment mechanism dominates the correlation between ellipticities on
cosmological scales (in the absence of lensing). We use recent large-scale
structure measurements from the Sloan Digital Sky Survey to test this picture
with several statistics: (1) the correlation between ellipticity and galaxy
overdensity, w_{g+}; (2) the intrinsic alignment auto-correlation functions;
(3) the correlation functions of curl-free, E, and divergence-free, B, modes
(the latter of which is zero in the linear tidal alignment theory); (4) the
alignment correlation function, w_g(r_p,theta), a recently developed statistic
that generalizes the galaxy correlation function to account for the angle
between the galaxy separation vector and the principle axis of ellipticity. We
show that recent measurements are largely consistent with the tidal alignment
model and discuss dependence on galaxy luminosity. In addition, we show that at
linear order the tidal alignment model predicts that the angular dependence of
w_g(r_p,theta) is simply w_{g+}*cos(2*theta) and that this dependence is
consistent with recent measurements. We also study how stochastic nonlinear
contributions to galaxy ellipticity impact these statistics. We find that a
significant fraction of the observed LRG ellipticity can be explained by
alignment with the tidal field on scales >~10 h^-1 Mpc. These considerations
are relevant to galaxy formation and evolution.Comment: 23 pages, 5 figures, minor changes to reflect published version,
including updated figures and a minor correction to the measured error
Conformal Invariance and Cosmic Background Radiation
The spectrum and statistics of the cosmic microwave background radiation
(CMBR) are investigated under the hypothesis that scale invariance of the
primordial density fluctuations should be promoted to full conformal
invariance. As in the theory of critical phenomena, this hypothesis leads in
general to deviations from naive scaling. The spectral index of the two-point
function of density fluctuations is given in terms of the quantum trace anomaly
and is greater than one, leading to less power at large distance scales than a
strict Harrison-Zel'dovich spectrum. Conformal invariance also implies
non-gaussian statistics for the higher point correlations and in particular, it
completely determines the large angular dependence of the three-point
correlations of the CMBR.Comment: 4 pages, Revtex file, uuencoded with one figur
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