566 research outputs found

    Large Scale Pressure Fluctuations and Sunyaev-Zel'dovich Effect

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    The Sunyaev-Zel'dovich (SZ) effect associated with pressure fluctuations of the large scale structure gas distribution will be probed with current and upcoming wide-field small angular scale cosmic microwave background experiments. We study the generation of pressure fluctuations by baryons which are present in virialized dark matter halos and by baryons present in small overdensities. For collapsed halos, assuming the gas distribution is in hydrostatic equilibrium with matter density distribution, we predict the pressure power spectrum and bispectrum associated with the large scale structure gas distribution by extending the dark matter halo approach which describes the density field in terms of correlations between and within halos. The projected pressure power spectrum allows a determination of the resulting SZ power spectrum due to virialized structures. The unshocked photoionized baryons present in smaller overdensities trace the Jeans-scale smoothed dark matter distribution. They provide a lower limit to the SZ effect due to large scale structure in the absence of massive collapsed halos. We extend our calculations to discuss higher order statistics, such as bispectrum and skewness in SZ data. The SZ-weak lensing cross-correlation is suggested as a probe of correlations between dark matter and baryon density fields, while the probability distribution functions of peak statistics of SZ halos in wide field CMB data can be used as a probe of cosmology and non-Gaussian evolution of large scale structure pressure fluctuations.Comment: 16 pages, 9 figures; Revised with expanded discussions. Phys. Rev. D. (in press

    Genesis of Dark Energy: Dark Energy as Consequence of Release and Two-stage Tracking Cosmological Nuclear Energy

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    Recent observations on Type-Ia supernovae and low density (Ωm=0.3\Omega_{m} = 0.3) measurement of matter including dark matter suggest that the present-day universe consists mainly of repulsive-gravity type `exotic matter' with negative-pressure often said `dark energy' (Ωx=0.7\Omega_{x} = 0.7). But the nature of dark energy is mysterious and its puzzling questions, such as why, how, where and when about the dark energy, are intriguing. In the present paper the authors attempt to answer these questions while making an effort to reveal the genesis of dark energy and suggest that `the cosmological nuclear binding energy liberated during primordial nucleo-synthesis remains trapped for a long time and then is released free which manifests itself as dark energy in the universe'. It is also explained why for dark energy the parameter w=2/3w = - {2/3}. Noting that w=1 w = 1 for stiff matter and w=1/3w = {1/3} for radiation; w=2/3w = - {2/3} is for dark energy because "1""-1" is due to `deficiency of stiff-nuclear-matter' and that this binding energy is ultimately released as `radiation' contributing "+1/3""+ {1/3}", making w=1+1/3=2/3w = -1 + {1/3} = - {2/3}. When dark energy is released free at Z=80Z = 80, w=2/3w = -{2/3}. But as on present day at Z=0Z = 0 when radiation strength has diminished to δ0\delta \to 0, w=1+δ1/3=1w = -1 + \delta{1/3} = - 1. This, thus almost solves the dark-energy mystery of negative pressure and repulsive-gravity. The proposed theory makes several estimates /predictions which agree reasonably well with the astrophysical constraints and observations. Though there are many candidate-theories, the proposed model of this paper presents an entirely new approach (cosmological nuclear energy) as a possible candidate for dark energy.Comment: 17 pages, 4 figures, minor correction

    Initial conditions for quintessence after inflation

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    We consider the behaviour of a quintessence field during an inflationary epoch, in order to learn how inflation influences the likely initial conditions for quintessence. We use the stochastic inflation formalism to study quantum fluctuations induced in the quintessence field during the early stages of inflation, and conclude that these drive its mean to large values (> 0.1 m_{Planck}). Consequently we find that tracker behaviour typically starts at low redshift, long after nucleosynthesis and most likely also after decoupling.Comment: 6 pages RevTeX4 file with five figures incorporated. Matches published versio

    Constraining the dark energy dynamics with the cosmic microwave background bispectrum

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    We consider the influence of the dark energy dynamics at the onset of cosmic acceleration on the Cosmic Microwave Background (CMB) bispectrum, through the weak lensing effect induced by structure formation. We study the line of sight behavior of the contribution to the bispectrum signal at a given angular multipole ll: we show that it is non-zero in a narrow interval centered at a redshift zz satisfying the relation l/r(z)kNL(z)l/r(z)\simeq k_{NL}(z), where the wavenumber corresponds to the scale entering the non-linear phase, and rr is the cosmological comoving distance. The relevant redshift interval is in the range 0.1\lsim z\lsim 2 for multipoles 1000\gsim\ell\gsim 100; the signal amplitude, reflecting the perturbation dynamics, is a function of the cosmological expansion rate at those epochs, probing the dark energy equation of state redshift dependence independently on its present value. We provide a worked example by considering tracking inverse power law and SUGRA Quintessence scenarios, having sensibly different redshift dynamics and respecting all the present observational constraints. For scenarios having the same present equation of state, we find that the effect described above induces a projection feature which makes the bispectra shifted by several tens of multipoles, about 10 times more than the corresponding effect on the ordinary CMB angular power spectrum.Comment: 15 pages, 7 figures, matching version accepted by Physical Review D, one figure improve

    The Williams Scale of Attitude toward Paganism: development and application among British Pagans

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    This article builds on the tradition of attitudinal measures of religiosity established by Leslie Francis and colleagues with the Francis Scale of Attitude toward Christianity (and reflected in the Sahin-Francis Scale of Attitude toward Islam, the Katz-Francis Scale of Attitude toward Judaism, and the Santosh-Francis Scale of Attitude toward Hinduism) by introducing a new measure to assess the attitudinal disposition of Pagans. A battery of items was completed by 75 members of a Pagan Summer Camp. These items were reduced to produce a 21-item scale that measured aspects of Paganism concerned with: the God/Goddess, worshipping, prayer, and coven. The scale recorded an alpha coefficient of 0.93. Construct validity of the Williams Scale of Attitude toward Paganism was demonstrated by the clear association with measures of participation in private rituals

    Bartonella Clarridgeiae Bacteremia Detected In An Asymptomatic Blood Donor

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    Human exposure to Bartonella clarridgeiae has been reported only on the basis of antibody detection. 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Isolated from a patient with endocarditis (1993) J Clin Microbiol, 31, pp. 872-881Oksi, J., Rantala, S., Kilpinen, S., Silvennoinen, R., Vornanen, M., Veikkolainen, V., Eerola, E., Pulliainen, A.T., Cat scratch disease caused by Bartonella grahamii in an immunocompromised patient (2013) J Clin Microbiol, 51, pp. 2781-2784. , http://dx.doi.org/10.1128/JCM.00910-13Breitschwerdt, E.B., Mascarelli, P.E., Schweickert, L.A., Maggi, R.G., Hegarty, B.C., Bradley, J.M., Woods, C.W., Hallucinations, sensory neuropathy, and peripheral visual deficits in a young woman infected with Bartonella koehlerae (2011) J Clin Microbiol, 49, pp. 3415-3417. , http://dx.doi.org/10.1128/JCM.00833-11Raoult, D., Roblot, F., Rolain, J.M., Besnier, J.M., Loulergue, J., Bastides, F., Choutet, P., First isolation of Bartonella alsatica from a valve of a patient with endocarditis (2006) J Clin Microbiol, 44, pp. 278-279. , http://dx.doi.org/10.1128/JCM.44.1.278-279.2006Welch, D.F., Carroll, K.C., Hofmeister, E.K., Persing, D.H., Robison, D.A., Steigerwalt, A.G., Brenner, D.J., Isolation of a new subspecies, Bartonella vinsonii subsp. Arupensis, from a cattle rancher: Identity with isolates found in conjunction with Borrelia burgdorferi and Babesia microti among naturally infected mice (1999) J Clin Microbiol, 37, pp. 2598-2601Probert, W., Louie, J.K., Tucker, J.R., Longoria, R., Hogue, R., Moler, S., Graves, M., Fritz, C.L., Meningitis due to a "Bartonella washoensis"-like human pathogen (2009) J Clin Microbiol, 47, pp. 2332-2335. , http://dx.doi.org/10.1128/JCM.00511-09Kosoy, M., Morway, C., Sheff, K.W., Bai, Y., Colborn, J., Chalcraft, L., Dowell, S.F., Petersen, L.R., Bartonella tamiae sp. Nov., a newly recognized pathogen isolated from three human patients from Thailand (2008) J Clin Microbiol, 46, pp. 772-775. , http://dx.doi.org/10.1128/JCM.02120-07Maggi, R.G., Kosoy, M., Mintzer, M., Breitschwerdt, E.B., Isolation of Candidatus Bartonella melophagi from human blood (2009) Emerg Infect Dis, 15, pp. 66-68. , http://dx.doi.org/10.3201/eid1501.081080Lin, E.Y., Tsigrelis, C., Baddour, L.M., Lepidi, H., Rolain, J.M., Patel, R., Raoult, D., Candidatus Bartonella mayotimonensis and endocarditis (2010) Emerg Infect Dis, 16, pp. 500-503. , http://dx.doi.org/10.3201/eid1603.081673Breitschwerdt, E.B., Maggi, R.G., Cadenas, M.B., De Paiva Diniz, P.P., A groundhog, a novel Bartonella sequence, and my father's death (2009) Emerg Infect Dis, 15, pp. 2080-2086. , http://dx.doi.org/10.3201/eid1512.AD151
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