71 research outputs found
When Did Cosmic Acceleration Start ?
A precise determination, and comparison, of the epoch of the onset of cosmic
acceleration, at redshift z_acc, and of dark energy domination, at z_eq,
provides an interesting measure with which to parameterize dark energy models.
By combining several cosmological datasets we place constraints on the redshift
and age of cosmological acceleration. For a Lambda-CDM model, we find the
constraint z_acc=0.76\pm0.10 at 95% c.l., occurring 6.7\pm0.4 Gyrs ago.
Allowing a constant equation of state but different from -1 changes the
constraints to z_acc=0.81\pm0.12 (6.9\pm0.5 Gyrs ago) and
z_eq=0.48\pm0.14(4.9\pm0.9 Gyrs ago), while dynamical models markedly increase
the error on the constraints with z_acc=0.81\pm0.30 (6.8\pm1.4 Gyrs ago) and
z_eq=0.44\pm0.20 (4.5\pm1.0 Gyrs ago). Unified dark energy models as Silent
Quartessence yield: z_acc=0.80\pm0.16 (6.8\pm0.6 Gyrs ago).Comment: 5 pages, 2 figure
Cosmic microwave background constraints on light dark matter candidates
Unveiling the nature of cosmic dark matter (DM) is an urgent issue in
cosmology. Here we make use of a strategy based on the search for the imprints
left on the cosmic microwave background temperature and polarization spectra by
the energy deposition due to annihilations of the most promising dark matter
candidate, a stable WIMP of mass 1-20 GeV. A major improvement with respect to
previous similar studies is a detailed treatment of the annihilation cascade
and its energy deposition in the cosmic gas. This is vital as this quantity is
degenerate with the annihilation cross-section . The strongest
constraints are obtained from Monte Carlo Markov chain analysis of the combined
WMAP7 and SPT datasets up to lmax = 3100. If annihilation occurs via the e+e-
channel, a light WIMP can be excluded at the 2 {\sigma} c.l. as a viable DM
candidate in the above mass range. However, if annihilation occurs via
{\mu}+{\mu}- or {\tau}+{\tau}- channels instead we find that WIMPs with mass >
5 GeV might represent a viable cosmological DM candidate. We compare the
results obtained in the present work with those obtained adopting an analytical
simplified model for the energy deposition process widely used in literature,
and we found that realistic energy deposition descriptions can influence the
resulting constrains up to 60%.Comment: 10 pages, 8 figures, 5 tables. Accepted for publication in MNRA
Constraining Warm Dark Matter with high- supernova lensing
We propose a new method to constrain the warm dark matter (WDM) particle
mass, , based on the counts of multiply imaged, distant supernovae (SN)
produced by strong lensing by intervening cosmological matter fluctuations. The
counts are very sensitive to the WDM particle mass, assumed here to be
keV. We use the analytic approach developed by Das &
Ostriker to compute the probability density function of the cold dark matter
(CDM) convergence () on the lens plane; such method has been
extensively tested against numerical simulations. We have extended this method
generalizing it to the WDM case, after testing it against WDM -body
simulations. Using the observed cosmic star formation history we compute the
probability for a distant SN to undergo a strong lensing event in different
cosmologies. A minimum observing time of 2 yr (5 yr) is required for a future
100 square degrees survey reaching () to disentangle
at 2 a WDM ( keV) model from the standard CDM scenario. Our
method is not affected by any astrophysical uncertainty (such as baryonic
physics effects), and, in principle, it does not require any particular
dedicated survey strategy, as it may come as a byproduct of a future SN survey.Comment: 7 pages, 7 figures, 1 table. Accepted for publication in MNRA
CMB Neutrino Mass Bounds and Reionization
Current cosmic microwave background (CMB) bounds on the sum of the neutrino
masses assume a sudden reionization scenario described by a single parameter
that determines the onset of reionization. We investigate the bounds on the
neutrino mass in a more general reionization scenario based on a principal
component approach. We found the constraint on the sum of the neutrino masses
from CMB data can be relaxed by a 40% in a generalized reionization
scenario. Moreover, the amplitude of the r.m.s. mass fluctuations is
also considerably lower providing a better consistency with a low amplitude of
the Sunyaev-Zel'dovich signal
No Evidence for Dark Energy Dynamics from a Global Analysis of Cosmological Data
We use a variant of principal component analysis to investigate the possible
temporal evolution of the dark energy equation of state, w(z). We constrain
w(z) in multiple redshift bins, utilizing the most recent data from Type Ia
supernovae, the cosmic microwave background, baryon acoustic oscillations, the
integrated Sachs-Wolfe effect, galaxy clustering, and weak lensing data. Unlike
other recent analyses, we find no significant evidence for evolving dark
energy; the data remains completely consistent with a cosmological constant. We
also study the extent to which the time-evolution of the equation of state
would be constrained by a combination of current- and future-generation
surveys, such as Planck and the Joint Dark Energy Mission.Comment: 6 pages, 5 figure
A new method to measure the mass of galaxy clusters
The mass measurement of galaxy clusters is an important tool for the
determination of cosmological parameters describing the matter and energy
content of the Universe. However, the standard methods rely on various
assumptions about the shape or the level of equilibrium of the cluster. We
present a novel method of measuring cluster masses. It is complementary to most
of the other methods, since it only uses kinematical information from outside
the virialized cluster. Our method identifies objects, as galaxy sheets or
filaments, in the cluster outer region, and infers the cluster mass by modeling
how the massive cluster perturbs the motion of the structures from the Hubble
flow. At the same time, this technique allows to constrain the
three-dimensional orientation of the detected structures with a good accuracy.
We use a cosmological numerical simulation to test the method. We then apply
the method to the Coma cluster, where we find two galaxy sheets, and measure
the mass of Coma to be Mvir=(9.2\pm2.4)10^{14} Msol, in good agreement with
previous measurements obtained with the standard methods.Comment: 10 pages, 12 figures, submitted to MNRA
Constraints on massive sterile neutrino species from current and future cosmological data
Sterile massive neutrinos are a natural extension of the Standard Model of
elementary particles. The energy density of the extra sterile massive states
affects cosmological measurements in an analogous way to that of active
neutrino species. We perform here an analysis of current cosmological data and
derive bounds on the masses of the active and the sterile neutrino states as
well as on the number of sterile states. The so-called (3+2) models with three
sub-eV active massive neutrinos plus two sub-eV massive sterile species is well
within the 95% CL allowed regions when considering cosmological data only. If
the two extra sterile states have thermal abundances at decoupling, Big Bang
Nucleosynthesis bounds compromise the viability of (3+2) models. Forecasts from
future cosmological data on the active and sterile neutrino parameters are also
presented. Independent measurements of the neutrino mass from tritium beta
decay experiments and of the Hubble constant could shed light on sub-eV massive
sterile neutrino scenarios.Comment: 9 pages, 7 figures. Journal versio
Harrison-Z'eldovich primordial spectrum is consistent with observations
Inflation predicts primordial scalar perturbations with a nearly
scale-invariant spectrum and a spectral index approximately unity (the
Harrison--Zel'dovich (HZ) spectrum). The first important step for inflationary
cosmology is to check the consistency of the HZ primordial spectrum with
current observations. Recent analyses have claimed that a HZ primordial
spectrum is excluded at more than 99% c.l.. Here we show that the HZ spectrum
is only marginally disfavored if one considers a more general reionization
scenario. Data from the Planck mission will settle the issue.Comment: 4 Pages, 2 Figure
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