443 research outputs found

    Cosmological constraints on dark energy

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    It has been only ~15 years since the discovery of dark energy (although some may argue there were strong indications even earlier). In the short time since measurements of type Ia supernovae indicated an accelerating universe, many other techniques have now confirmed the acceleration is real. The variety of ways in which dark energy has been confirmed is one of the reasons we are so confident in the statement that most of the energy in the universe is in a form we can not see except through its gravitational influence. This review aims to summarise briefly the many varied ways we now have measured dark energy. The fact that these different techniques all indicate that the simplest model remains the best -- that dark energy contributes a constant background acceleration -- is remarkable, since each of these different types of measurements represented opportunities for this simplest model to fail. Although we currently lack a compelling theoretical explanation for this acceleration, any explanation will have to explain the wide variety of complementary observations that we review here. This is an informal presentation, following the lines of the talk I presented at the General Relativity and Gravitation (GR20) conference in Warsaw in July 2013.Comment: 23 pages, 8 figures. This astro-ph version contains bonus material (indicated by blue text) that would not fit within the published version's page limit

    Deriving accurate peculiar velocities (even at high redshift)

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    The way that peculiar velocities are often inferred from measurements of distances and redshifts makes an approximation, v_p = cz-H_0 D, that gives significant errors even at relatively low redshifts (overestimates peculiar velocity by ~ 100 km/s at z~0.04). Here we demonstrate where the approximation breaks down, the systematic offset it introduces, and how the exact calculation should be implemented.Comment: 6 pages, 4 figures, accepted by MNRAS; revision adds footnote 3, a couple of references, and some minor tweaks to tex

    Cosmology with Peculiar Velocities: Observational Effects

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    In this paper we investigate how observational effects could possibly bias cosmological inferences from peculiar velocity measurements. Specifically, we look at how bulk flow measurements are compared with theoretical predictions. Usually bulk flow calculations try to approximate the flow that would occur in a sphere around the observer. Using the Horizon Run 2 simulation we show that the traditional methods for bulk flow estimation can overestimate the magnitude of the bulk flow for two reasons: when the survey geometry is not spherical (the data do not cover the whole sky), and when the observations undersample the velocity distributions. Our results may explain why several bulk flow measurements found bulk flow velocities that seem larger than those expected in standard {\Lambda}CDM cosmologies. We recommend a different approach when comparing bulk flows to cosmological models, in which the theoretical prediction for each bulk flow measurement is calculated specifically for the geometry and sampling rate of that survey. This means that bulk flow values will not be comparable between surveys, but instead they are comparable with cosmological models, which is the more important measure.Comment: 11 pages, 5 figures. Accepted for publication in MNRA

    Combining Planck with Large Scale Structure gives strong neutrino mass constraint

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    We present the strongest current cosmological upper limit on the sum of neutrino masses of < 0.18 (95% confidence). It is obtained by adding observations of the large-scale matter power spectrum from the WiggleZ Dark Energy Survey to observations of the cosmic microwave background data from the Planck surveyor, and measurements of the baryon acoustic oscillation scale. The limit is highly sensitive to the priors and assumptions about the neutrino scenario. We explore scenarios with neutrino masses close to the upper limit (degenerate masses), neutrino masses close to the lower limit where the hierarchy plays a role, and addition of massive or massless sterile species.Comment: 7 pages, 4 figures. Found bug in analysis which is fixed in v2. The resulting constraints on M_nu remain very strong. Additional info added on hierarch

    Fundamental Aspects of the Expansion of the Universe and Cosmic Horizons

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    In the context of the new standard LambdaCDM cosmology we resolve conflicts in the literature regarding fundamental aspects of the expansion of the universe and cosmic horizons and we link these concepts to observational tests. We derive the dynamics of a non-comoving galaxy and use this to demonstrate the counter-intuitive result that objects at constant proper distance can have a non-zero redshift. Receding galaxies can be blueshifted and approaching galaxies can be redshifted, even in an empty universe for which one might expect special relativity to apply. We then test the generalized second law of thermodynamics (GSL) and its extension to incorporate cosmological event horizons. In spite of the fact that cosmological horizons do not generally have well-defined thermal properties, we find that the GSL is satisfied for a wide range of models. We explore in particular the relative entropic 'worth' of black hole versus cosmological horizon area. An intriguing set of models show an apparent entropy decrease but we anticipate this apparent violation of the GSL will disappear when solutions are available for black holes embedded in arbitrary backgrounds. Recent evidence suggests a small increase in the fine structure constant (alpha =e^2/hbar c) over cosmological time scales. This raises the question of which fundamental quantities are truly constant and which might vary. We show that black hole thermodynamics may provide a means to discriminate between alternative theories invoking varying constants, because some variations in the fundamental 'constants' could lead to a violation of the generalized second law of thermodynamics.Comment: Ph.D. thesis, 154 pages, 45 figure

    Standard siren speeds: improving velocities in gravitational-wave measurements of H0

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    We re-analyse data from the gravitational-wave event GW170817 and its host galaxy NGC 4993 to demonstrate the importance of accurate total and peculiar velocities when measuring the Hubble constant using this nearby standard siren. We show that a number of reasonable choices can be made to estimate the velocities for this event, but that systematic differences remain between these measurements depending on the data used. This leads to significant changes in the Hubble constant inferred from GW170817. We present Bayesian model averaging as one way to account for these differences, and obtain H-0 = 66.8(-9.2)(+13.4) km s(-1)Mpc(-1). Adding additional information on the viewing angle from high-resolution imaging of the radio counterpart refines this to H-0 = 64.8(-7.2)(+7.3) km s(-1) Mpc(-1). During this analysis, we also present an alternative Bayesian model for the posterior on H-0 from standard sirens that works more closely with observed quantities from redshift and peculiar velocity surveys. Our results more accurately capture the true uncertainty on the total and peculiar velocities of NGC 4993 and show that exploring how well different data sets characterize galaxy groups and the velocity field in the local Universe could improve this measurement further. These considerations impact any low-redshift distance measurement, and the improvements we suggest here can also be applied to standard candles like Type Ia supernovae. GW170817 is particularly sensitive to peculiar velocity uncertainties because it is so close. For future standard siren measurements, the importance of this error will decrease as (i) we will measure more distant standard sirens and (ii) the random direction of peculiar velocities will average out with more detections

    Solutions to the tethered galaxy problem in an expanding universe and the observation of receding blueshifted objects

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    We use the dynamics of a galaxy, set up initially at a constant proper distance from an observer, to derive and illustrate two counter-intuitive general relativistic results. Although the galaxy does gradually join the expansion of the universe (Hubble flow), it does not necessarily recede from us. In particular, in the currently favored cosmological model, which includes a cosmological constant, the galaxy recedes from the observer as it joins the Hubble flow, but in the previously favored cold dark matter model, the galaxy approaches, passes through the observer, and joins the Hubble flow on the opposite side of the sky. We show that this behavior is consistent with the general relativistic idea that space is expanding and is determined by the acceleration of the expansion of the universe -- not a force or drag associated with the expansion itself. We also show that objects at a constant proper distance will have a nonzero redshift; receding galaxies can be blueshifted and approaching galaxies can be redshifted.Comment: 8 pages including 6 figures, to appear in Am. J. Phys., 2003. Reference added in postscrip

    On the Non-observability of Recent Biogenesis

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    In a previous paper we addressed the question "Does the Rapid Appearance of Life on Earth Suggest that Life is Common in the Universe?" The non-observability of recent biogenesis is a self-selection effect that needs to be considered if inferences are to be drawn from the rapidity of terrestrial biogenesis. We discuss several approaches that have been proposed to take this effect into account.Comment: 3 pages, no figures, in press at "Astrobiology", Vol 3, 2003 Reply to a comment on our previous paper: astro-ph/020501

    Superluminal Recession Velocities

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    Hubble's Law, v=HD (recession velocity is proportional to distance), is a theoretical result derived from the Friedmann-Robertson-Walker metric. v=HD applies at least as far as the particle horizon and in principle for all distances. Thus, galaxies with distances greater than D=c/H are receding from us with velocities greater than the speed of light and superluminal recession is a fundamental part of the general relativistic description of the expanding universe. This apparent contradiction of special relativity (SR) is often mistakenly remedied by converting redshift to velocity using SR. Here we show that galaxies with recession velocities faster than the speed of light are observable and that in all viable cosmological models, galaxies above a redshift of three are receding superluminally.Comment: 4 pages, 2 figures, Cosmology and Particle Physics 2000 Conference Proceedings; reference adde
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