197 research outputs found
Dark Before Light: Testing the Cosmic Expansion History through the Cosmic Microwave Background
The cosmic expansion history proceeds in broad terms from a radiation
dominated epoch to matter domination to an accelerated, dark energy dominated
epoch. We investigate whether intermittent periods of acceleration are possible
in the early universe -- between Big Bang nucleosynthesis (BBN) and
recombination and beyond. We establish that the standard picture is remarkably
robust: observations of anisotropies in the cosmic microwave background exclude
any extra period of accelerated expansion between 1 \leq z \lesssim 10^5
(corresponding to 5\times10^{-4}\ {\rm eV} \leq T \lesssim 25\ {\rm eV}).Comment: 7 pages, 5 figure
Degree of randomness: numerical experiments for astrophysical signals
Astrophysical and cosmological signals such as the cosmic microwave
background radiation, as observed, typically contain contributions of different
components, and their statistical properties can be used to distinguish one
from the other. A method developed originally by Kolmogorov is involved for the
study of astrophysical signals of randomness of various degrees. Numerical
performed experiments based on the universality of Kolmogorov distribution and
using a single scaling of the ratio of stochastic to regular components, reveal
basic features in the behavior of generated signals also in terms of a critical
value for that ratio, thus enable the application of this technique for various
observational datasetsComment: 6 pages, 9 figures; Europhys.Letters; to match the published versio
Kolmogorov analysis detecting radio and Fermi gamma-ray sources in cosmic microwave background maps
The Kolmogorov stochasticity parameter is shown to act as a tool to detect
point sources in the cosmic microwave background (CMB) radiation temperature
maps. Kolmogorov CMB map constructed for the WMAP's 7-year datasets reveals
tiny structures which in part coincide with point radio and Fermi/LAT gamma-ray
sources. In the first application of this method, we identified several sources
not present in the then available 0FGL Fermi catalog. Subsequently they were
confirmed in the more recent and more complete 1FGL catalog, thus strengthening
the evidence for the power of this methodology.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figs, 1 Table; to match the published versio
First Year Wilkinson Microwave Anisotropy Probe (WMAP) Observations: Implications for Inflation
We confront predictions of inflationary scenarios with the WMAP data, in
combination with complementary small-scale CMB measurements and large-scale
structure data. The WMAP detection of a large-angle anti-correlation in the
temperature--polarization cross-power spectrum is the signature of adiabatic
superhorizon fluctuations at the time of decoupling. The WMAP data are
described by pure adiabatic fluctuations: we place an upper limit on a
correlated CDM isocurvature component. Using WMAP constraints on the shape of
the scalar power spectrum and the amplitude of gravity waves, we explore the
parameter space of inflationary models that is consistent with the data. We
place limits on inflationary models; for example, a minimally-coupled lambda
phi^4 is disfavored at more than 3-sigma using WMAP data in combination with
smaller scale CMB and large scale structure survey data. The limits on the
primordial parameters using WMAP data alone are: n_s(k_0=0.002
Mpc^{-1})=1.20_{-0.11}^{+0.12}, dn/dlnk=-0.077^{+0.050}_{- 0.052}, A(k_0=0.002
Mpc}^{-1})=0.71^{+0.10}_{-0.11} (68% CL), and r(k_0=0.002 Mpc^{-1})<1.28 (95%
CL).Comment: Accepted by ApJ; 49 pages, 9 figures. V2: Gives constraints from WMAP
data alone. Corrected approximation which made the constraints in Table 1 to
shift slightly. Corrected the Inflation Flow following the revision to
Kinney, astro-ph/0206032. No conclusions have been changed. For a detailed
list of changes see http://www.astro.princeton.edu/~hiranya/README.ERRATA.tx
Cosmic string loop distribution on all length scales and at any redshift
We analytically derive the expected number density distribution of Nambu-Goto
cosmic string loops at any redshift soon after the time of string formation to
today. Our approach is based on the Polchinski-Rocha model of loop formation
from long strings which we adjust to fit numerical simulations and complement
by a phenomenological modelling of gravitational backreaction. Cosmological
evolution drives the loop distribution towards scaling on all length scales in
both the radiation and matter era. Memory of any reasonable initial loop
distribution in the radiation era is shown to be erased well before Big Bang
Nucleosynthesis. In the matter era, the loop distribution reaches full scaling,
up to some residual loops from the radiation era which may be present for
extremely low string tension. Finally, the number density of loops below the
gravitational cutoff is shown to be scale independent, proportional to a
negative power of the string tension and insensitive to the details of the
backreaction modelling. As an application, we show that the energy density
parameter of loops today cannot exceed 10^(-5) for currently allowed string
tension values, while the loop number density cannot be less than 10^(-6) per
Mpc^3. Our result should provide a more robust basis for studying the
cosmological consequences of cosmic string loops.Comment: 24 pages, 4 figures, uses iopart. References added, matches published
versio
The fine-tuning price of the early LHC
LHC already probed and excluded half of the parameter space of the
Constrained Minimal Supersymmetric Standard Model allowed by previous
experiments. Only about 0.3% of the CMSSM parameter space survives. This
fraction rises to about 0.9% if the bound on the Higgs mass can be
circumvented.Comment: 7 pages. v3: updated with new bounds from ATLAS and CMS at 1.1/fb
presented at the EPS-HEP-2011 conferenc
Shapes of Gas, Gravitational Potential and Dark Matter in Lambda-CDM Clusters
We present analysis of the three-dimensional shape of intracluster gas in
clusters formed in cosmological simulations of the Lambda-CDM cosmology and
compare it to the shape of dark matter distribution and the shape of the
overall isopotential surfaces. We find that in simulations with radiative
cooling, star formation and stellar feedback (CSF), intracluster gas outside
the cluster core is more spherical compared to non-radiative (NR) simulations,
while in the core the gas in the CSF runs is more triaxial and has a distinctly
oblate shape. The latter reflects the ongoing cooling of gas, which settles
into a thick oblate ellipsoid as it loses thermal energy. The shape of the gas
in the inner regions of clusters can therefore be a useful diagnostic of gas
cooling. We find that gas traces the shape of the underlying potential rather
well outside the core, as expected in hydrostatic equilibrium. At smaller
radii, however, the gas and potential shapes differ significantly. In the CSF
runs, the difference reflects the fact that gas is partly rotationally
supported. Interestingly, we find that in NR simulations the difference between
gas and potential shape at small radii is due to random gas motions, which make
the gas distribution more spherical than the equipotential surfaces. Finally,
we use mock Chandra X-ray maps to show that the differences in shapes observed
in three-dimensional distribution of gas are discernible in the ellipticity of
X-ray isophotes. Contrasting the ellipticities measured in simulated clusters
against observations can therefore constrain the amount of cooling of the
intracluster medium and the presence of random gas motions in cluster cores.Comment: 11 pages, 8 figures, 3 tables, updated to match the version accepted
for publication in the Astrophysical Journa
Fluid phonons and inflaton quanta at the protoinflationary transition
Quantum and thermal fluctuations of an irrotational fluid are studied across
the transition regime connecting a protoinflationary phase of decelerated
expansion to an accelerated epoch driven by a single inflaton field. The
protoinflationary inhomogeneities are suppressed when the transition to the
slow roll phase occurs sharply over space-like hypersurfaces of constant energy
density. If the transition is delayed, the interaction of the quasi-normal
modes related, asymptotically, to fluid phonons and inflaton quanta leads to an
enhancement of curvature perturbations. It is shown that the dynamics of the
fluctuations across the protoinflationary boundaries is determined by the
monotonicity properties of the pump fields controlling the energy transfer
between the background geometry and the quasi-normal modes of the fluctuations.
After corroborating the analytical arguments with explicit numerical examples,
general lessons are drawn on the classification of the protoinflationary
transition.Comment: 30 pages, 3 figure
Constraining Cluster Physics with the Shape of X-ray Clusters: Comparison of Local X-ray Clusters versus LCDM Clusters
Simulations of cluster formation have demonstrated that condensation of
baryons into central galaxies during cluster formation can drive the shape of
the gas distribution in galaxy clusters significantly rounder, even at radii as
large as half of the virial radius. However, such simulations generally predict
stellar fractions within cluster virial radii that are ~2 to 3 times larger
than the stellar masses deduced from observations. In this work we compare
ellipticity profiles of clusters simulated with and without baryonic cooling to
the cluster ellipticity profiles derived from Chandra and ROSAT observations in
an effort to constrain the fraction of gas that cools and condenses into the
central galaxies within clusters. We find that the observed ellipticity
profiles are fairly constant with radius, with an average ellipticity of 0.18
+/- 0.05. The observed ellipticity profiles are in good agreement with the
predictions of non-radiative simulations. On the other hand, the ellipticity
profiles of the clusters in simulations that include radiative cooling, star
formation, and supernova feedback (but no AGN feedback) deviate significantly
from the observed ellipticity profiles at all radii. The simulations with
cooling overpredict (underpredict) ellipticity in the inner (outer) regions of
galaxy clusters. By comparing the simulations with and without cooling, we show
that the cooling of gas via cooling flows in the central regions of simulated
clusters causes the gas distribution to be more oblate in the central regions,
but makes the outer gas distribution more spherical. We find that late-time gas
cooling and star formation are responsible for the significantly oblate gas
distributions in cluster cores, but the gas shapes outside of cluster cores are
set primarily by baryon dissipation at high redshift z > 2.Comment: 10 pages, 6 figures, matching the published version in ApJ. Corrected
missing reference in the arxiv versio
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