17,949 research outputs found
Signal-to-Noise Eigenmode Analysis of the Two-Year COBE Maps
To test a theory of cosmic microwave background fluctuations, it is natural
to expand an anisotropy map in an uncorrelated basis of linear combinations of
pixel amplitudes --- statistically-independent for both the noise and the
signal. These -eigenmodes are indispensible for rapid Bayesian analyses of
anisotropy experiments, applied here to the recently-released two-year COBE
{\it dmr} maps and the {\it firs} map. A 2-parameter model with an overall
band-power and a spectral tilt describes well inflation-based
theories. The band-powers for {\it all} the {\it dmr} + GHz
and {\it firs} 170 GHz maps agree, , and
are largely independent of tilt and degree of (sharp) -filtering. Further,
after optimal -filtering, the {\it dmr} maps reveal the same
tilt-independent large scale features and correlation function. The unfiltered
{\it dmr} + index is ; increasing the
-filtering gives a broad region at (1.0--1.2)0.5, a jump to
(1.4--1.6)0.5, then a drop to 0.8, the higher values clearly seen to be
driven by -power spectrum data points that do not fit single-tilt models.
These indices are nicely compatible with inflation values (0.8--1.2), but
not overwhelmingly so.Comment: submitted to Phys.Rev.Letters, 4 pages, uuencoded compressed
PostScript; also bdmr2.ps.Z, via anonymous ftp to ftp.cita.utoronto.ca, cd to
/pub/dick/yukawa; CITA-94-2
Probing the Primordial Power Spectrum with Cluster Number Counts
We investigate how well galaxy cluster number counts can constrain the
primordial power spectrum. Measurements of the primary anisotropies in the
cosmic microwave background (CMB) may be limited, by the presence of
foregrounds from secondary sources, to probing the primordial power spectrum at
wave numbers less than about 0.30 h Mpc^{-1}. We break up the primordial power
spectrum into a number of nodes and interpolate linearly between each node.
This allows us to show that cluster number counts could then extend the
constraints on the form of the primordial power spectrum up to wave numbers of
about 0.45 h Mpc^{-1}. We estimate combinations of constraints from PLANCK and
SPT primary CMB and their respective SZ surveys. We find that their
constraining ability is limited by uncertainties in the mass scaling relations.
We also estimate the constraint from clusters detected from a SNAP like
gravitational lensing survey. As there is an unambiguous and simple
relationship between the filtered shear of the lensing survey and the cluster
mass, it may be possible to obtain much tighter constraints on the primordial
power spectrum in this case.Comment: Clarifications added and a few minor corrections made. Matches
version to appear in PR
Constraints on dark energy and cosmic topology
A non-trivial spatial topology of the Universe is a potentially observable
attribute, which can be probed through the circles-in-the-sky for all locally
homogeneous and isotropic universes with no assumptions on the cosmological
parameters. We show how one can use a possible circles-in-the-sky detection of
the spatial topology of globally homogeneous universes to set constraints on
the dark energy equation of state parameters.Comment: 6 pages, 1 figure. To appear in Int. J. Mod. Phys. A (2009). From a
talk presented at the Seventh Alexander Friedmann International Seminar on
Gravitation and Cosmolog
Arkansas Soybean Performance Tests 2018
Soybean variety and strain performance tests are conducted each year in Arkansas by the University of Arkansas System Division of Agriculture’s Arkansas Crop Variety Improvement Program. The tests provide information to companies developing varieties and/or marketing seed within the State, and aid the Arkansas Cooperative Extension Service in formulating variety recommendations for soybean producers
Inhomogeneous reionization and the polarization of the cosmic microwave background
In a universe with inhomogeneous reionization, the ionized patches create a
second order signal in the cosmic microwave background polarization anisotropy.
This signal originates in the coupling of the free electron fluctuation to the
quadruple moment of the temperature anisotropy. We examine the contribution
from a simple inhomogeneous reionization model and find that the signal from
such a process is below the detectable limits of the Planck Surveyor mission.
However t he signal is above the fundamental uncertainty limit from cosmic
variance, so th at a future detection with a high accuracy experiment on
sub-arcminute scales is possible.Comment: 10 pages, 2 eps figures, final version accepted for publication in
ApJ Letter
Constraining Large Scale Structure Theories with the Cosmic Background Radiation
We review the relevant 10+ parameters associated with inflation and matter
content; the relation between LSS and primary and secondary CMB anisotropy
probes; COBE constraints on energy injection; current anisotropy band-powers
which strongly support the gravitational instability theory and suggest the
universe could not have reionized too early. We use Bayesian analysis methods
to determine what current CMB and CMB+LSS data imply for inflation-based
Gaussian fluctuations in tilted CDM, hCDM and oCDM model
sequences with age 11-15 Gyr, consisting of mixtures of baryons, cold (and
possibly hot) dark matter, vacuum energy, and curvature energy in open
cosmologies. For example, we find the slope of the initial spectrum is within
about 5% of the (preferred) scale invariant form when just the CMB data is
used, and for CDM when LSS data is combined with CMB; with both, a
nonzero value of is strongly preferred ( for a 13
Gyr sequence, similar to the value from SNIa). The CDM sequence prefers
, but is overall much less likely than the flat
sequence with CMB+LSS. We also review the rosy forecasts
of angular power spectra and parameter estimates from future balloon and
satellite experiments when foreground and systematic effects are ignored.Comment: 20 pages, LaTeX, 5 figures, 2 tables, uses rspublic.sty To appear in
Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society of London A, 1998.
"Discussion Meeting on Large Scale Structure in the Universe," Royal Society,
London, March 1998. Text and colour figures also available at
ftp://ftp.cita.utoronto.ca/bond/roysoc9
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