5,440 research outputs found
Eternally inflating cosmologies from intersecting spacelike branes
Intersecting spacelike braneworld cosmologies are investigated. The time axis
is set on the scale parameter of extra space, which may include more than one
timelike metric. Obtained are eternally inflating (i.e. undergoing late-time
inflation) Robertson-Walker spacetime and extra space with a constant scale
factor. In the case of multibrane solutions, some dimensions are static or
shrink. The fact that the largest supersymmetry algebra contains 32
supercharges in 4 dimensions imposes a restriction on the geometry of extra
space.Comment: 19 page
Dark Energy Accretion onto a Black Hole in an Expanding Universe
By using the solution describing a black hole embedded in the FLRW universe,
we obtain the evolving equation of the black hole mass expressed in terms of
the cosmological parameters. The evolving equation indicates that in the
phantom dark energy universe the black hole mass becomes zero before the Big
Rip is reached.Comment: 7 pages, no figures, errors is correcte
Carmeli's accelerating universe is spatially flat without dark matter
Carmeli's 5D brane cosmology has been applied to the expanding accelerating
universe and it has been found that the distance redshift relation will fit the
data of the high-z supernova teams without the need for dark matter. Also the
vacuum energy contribution to gravity indicates that the universe is
asymptotically expanding towards a spatially flat state, where the total
mass/energy density tends to unity.Comment: 4 pages, 5 figures, accepted for publication in Int. J. Theor.
Physics, this paper is based on an invited talk at FFP6, Udine, Italy, Sept
200
Cosmological parameter extraction and biases from type Ia supernova magnitude evolution
We study different one-parametric models of type Ia Supernova magnitude
evolution on cosmic time scales. Constraints on cosmological and Supernova
evolution parameters are obtained by combined fits on the actual data coming
from Supernovae, the cosmic microwave background, and baryonic acoustic
oscillations. We find that data prefer a magnitude evolution such that
high-redshift Supernova are brighter than would be expected in a standard
cosmos with a dark energy component. Data however are consistent with
non-evolving magnitudes at the one-sigma level, except special cases.
We simulate a future data scenario where SN magnitude evolution is allowed
for, and neglect the possibility of such an evolution in the fit. We find the
fiducial models for which the wrong model assumption of non-evolving SN
magnitude is not detectable, and for which at the same time biases on the
fitted cosmological parameters are introduced. Of the cosmological parameters
the overall mass density has the strongest chances to be biased due to the
wrong model assumption. Whereas early-epoch models with a magnitude offset ~z^2
show up to be not too dangerous when neglected in the fitting procedure, late
epoch models with magnitude offset ~sqrt(z) have high chances to bias the fit
results.Comment: 12 pages, 5 figures, 3 tables. Accepted for publication by A&A.
Revised version: Corrected Typos, reference added to section
Brans-Dicke model constrained from Big Bang nucleosynthesis and magnitude redshift relations of Supernovae
The Brans-Dicke model with a variable cosmological term () has
been investigated with use of the coupling constant of .
Parameters inherent in this model are constrained from comparison between Big
Bang nucleosynthesis and the observed abundances. Furthermore, the magnitude
redshift () relations are studied for with and without another
constant cosmological term in a flat universe. Observational data of Type Ia
Supernovae are used in the redshift range of . It is found that our
model with energy density of the constant cosmological term with the value of
0.7 can explain the SNIa observations, though the model parameters are
insensitive to the relation.Comment: Submitted to A&A, 4 pages, 3 figure
Cosmicflows-2: SNIa Calibration and H0
The construction of the Cosmicflows-2 compendium of distances involves the
merging of distance measures contributed by the following methods: (Cepheid)
Period-Luminosity, Tip of the Red Giant Branch (TRGB), Surface Brightness
Fluctuation (SBF), Luminosity-Linewidth (TF), Fundamental Plane (FP), and Type
Ia supernova (SNIa). The method involving SNIa is at the top of an
interconnected ladder, providing accurate distances to well beyond the expected
range of distortions to Hubble flow from peculiar motions. In this paper, the
SNIa scale is anchored by 36 TF spirals with Cepheid or TRGB distances, 56 SNIa
hosts with TF distances, and 61 groups or clusters hosting SNIa with Cepheid,
SBF, TF, or FP distances. With the SNIa scale zero point set, a value of the
Hubble Constant is evaluated over a range of redshifts 0.03 < z < 0.5, assuming
a cosmological model with Omega_m = 0.27 and Omega_Lambda = 0.73. The value
determined for the Hubble Constant is H0 = 75.9 \pm 3.8 km s-1 Mpc-1.Comment: Accepted for publication in The Astrophysical Journal. 11 pages,
8Figures, 5 Table
Why we need to see the dark matter to understand the dark energy
The cosmological concordance model contains two separate constituents which
interact only gravitationally with themselves and everything else, the dark
matter and the dark energy. In the standard dark energy models, the dark matter
makes up some 20% of the total energy budget today, while the dark energy is
responsible for about 75%. Here we show that these numbers are only robust for
specific dark energy models and that in general we cannot measure the abundance
of the dark constituents separately without making strong assumptions.Comment: 4 pages, to be published in the Journal of Physics: Conference Series
as a contribution to the 2007 Europhysics Conference on High Energy Physic
Dark energy FRW cosmology - dynamical system reconstruction
We develop a simple method of dark energy reconstruction using a geometrical
form of the luminosity-distance relation. In this method the FRW dynamical
system with dark energy is reconstructed instead of the equation of state
parameter. We give several examples which illustrate the usefulness of our
method in fitting the redshift transition from the decelerating to accelerating
phase as the value of the Hubble function at the transition.Comment: Talk presented at Spanish Relativity Meeting 2007, Puerto de la Cruz,
Tenerife, Spain, 10-14 September 200
Geometry and Destiny
The recognition that the cosmological constant may be non-zero forces us to
re-evaluate standard notions about the connection between geometry and the fate
of our Universe. An open Universe can recollapse, and a closed Universe can
expand forever. As a corollary, we point out that there is no set of
cosmological observations we can perform that will unambiguously allow us to
determine what the ultimate destiny of the Universe will be.Comment: 7 pages, Gravity Research Foundation Essa
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