549 research outputs found
Imaging Technology and Systems
Presents a review of various imaging techniques used in the ground-based airborne and spaceborne systems. It mainly covers the subject on electromagnetic spectrum extending from ultraviolet to microwave region. Discusses various imaging techniques, including their advantages/limitations and available systems and highlights visible, near infrared, thermal infrared and millimeter wave band imaging system developed by the Defence Electronics Applications Laboratory, Dehradun
Late acceleration and crossing in induced gravity
We study the cosmological evolution on a brane with induced gravity within a
bulk with arbitrary matter content. We consider a Friedmann-Robertson-Walker
brane, invariantly characterized by a six-dimensional group of isometries. We
derive the effective Friedmann and Raychaudhuri equations. We show that the
Hubble expansion rate on the brane depends on the covariantly defined
integrated mass in the bulk, which determines the energy density of the
generalized dark radiation. The Friedmann equation has two branches,
distinguished by the two possible values of the parameter \ex=\pm 1. The
branch with \ex=1 is characterized by an effective cosmological constant and
accelerated expansion for low energy densities. Another remarkable feature is
that the contribution from the generalized dark radiation appears with a
negative sign. As a result, the presence of the bulk corresponds to an
effective negative energy density on the brane, without violation of the weak
energy condition. The transition from a period of domination of the matter
energy density by non-relativistic brane matter to domination by the
generalized dark radiation corresponds to a crossing of the phantom divide
.Comment: 7 pages, no figures, RevTex 4.0; (v2) new references are added, minor
corrections and expanded discussion; (v3) additional comments at the end of
section III, minor corrections and several new references are added, to match
published version in Phys. Rev.
Evolution of perturbations in distinct classes of canonical scalar field models of dark energy
Dark energy must cluster in order to be consistent with the equivalence
principle. The background evolution can be effectively modelled by either a
scalar field or by a barotropic fluid.The fluid model can be used to emulate
perturbations in a scalar field model of dark energy, though this model breaks
down at large scales. In this paper we study evolution of dark energy
perturbations in canonical scalar field models: the classes of thawing and
freezing models.The dark energy equation of state evolves differently in these
classes.In freezing models, the equation of state deviates from that of a
cosmological constant at early times.For thawing models, the dark energy
equation of state remains near that of the cosmological constant at early times
and begins to deviate from it only at late times.Since the dark energy equation
of state evolves differently in these classes,the dark energy perturbations too
evolve differently. In freezing models, since the equation of state deviates
from that of a cosmological constant at early times, there is a significant
difference in evolution of matter perturbations from those in the cosmological
constant model.In comparison, matter perturbations in thawing models differ
from the cosmological constant only at late times. This difference provides an
additional handle to distinguish between these classes of models and this
difference should manifest itself in the ISW effect.Comment: 11 pages, 6 figures, accepted for publication in Phys. Rev.
Vacuum Fluctuations of Energy Density can lead to the observed Cosmological Constant
The energy density associated with Planck length is while the energy density associated with the Hubble length is
where . The observed value of the dark
energy density is quite different from {\it either} of these and is close to
the geometric mean of the two: .
It is argued that classical gravity is actually a probe of the vacuum {\it
fluctuations} of energy density, rather than the energy density itself. While
the globally defined ground state, being an eigenstate of Hamiltonian, will not
have any fluctuations, the ground state energy in the finite region of space
bounded by the cosmic horizon will exhibit fluctuations . When used as a source of gravity, this should
lead to a spacetime with a horizon size . This bootstrapping condition
leads naturally to an effective dark energy density which is precisely the observed value. The model
requires, either (i) a stochastic fluctuations of vacuum energy which is
correlated over about a Hubble time or (ii) a semi- anthropic interpretation.
The implications are discussed.Comment: r pages; revtex; comments welcom
Equation of state description of the dark energy transition between quintessence and phantom regimes
The dark energy crossing of the cosmological constant boundary (the
transition between the quintessence and phantom regimes) is described in terms
of the implicitly defined dark energy equation of state. The generalizations of
the models explicitly constructed to exhibit the crossing provide the insight
into the cancellation mechanism which makes the transition possible.Comment: 3 pages, talk given at TAUP200
Analytical results for string propagation near a Kaluza-Klein black hole
This brief report presents analytical solutions to the equations of motion of
a null string. The background spacetime is a magnetically charged Kaluza-Klein
black hole. The string coordinates are expanded with the world-sheet velocity
of light as an expansion parameter. It is shown that the zeroth order solutions
can be expressed in terms of elementary functions in an appropriate large
distance approximation. In addition, a class of exact solutions corresponding
to the Pollard-Gross-Perry-Sorkin monopole case is also obtained.Comment: Revtex, 9 pages including two postscript figures, More detailed
discussion and new references adde
Different faces of the phantom
The SNe type Ia data admit that the Universe today may be dominated by some
exotic matter with negative pressure violating all energy conditions. Such
exotic matter is called {\it phantom matter} due to the anomalies connected
with violation of the energy conditions. If a phantom matter dominates the
matter content of the universe, it can develop a singularity in a finite future
proper time. Here we show that, under certain conditions, the evolution of
perturbations of this matter may lead to avoidance of this future singularity
(the Big Rip). At the same time, we show that local concentrations of a phantom
field may form, among other regular configurations, black holes with
asymptotically flat static regions, separated by an event horizon from an
expanding, singularity-free, asymptotically de Sitter universe.Comment: 6 pages, presented at IRGAC 2006, Barcelona, 11-15 July 200
Parametrization of dark energy equation of state Revisited
A comparative study of various parametrizations of the dark energy equation
of state is made. Astrophysical constraints from LSS, CMB and BBN are laid down
to test the physical viability and cosmological compatibility of these
parametrizations. A critical evaluation of the 4-index parametrizations reveals
that Hannestad-M\"{o}rtsell as well as Lee parametrizations are simple and
transparent in probing the evolution of the dark energy during the expansion
history of the universe and they satisfy the LSS, CMB and BBN constraints on
the dark energy density parameter for the best fit values.Comment: 11 page
Scalar field description of a parametric model of dark energy
We investigate theoretical and observational aspects of a time-dependent
parameterization for the dark energy equation of state (EoS) , which is a
well behaved function of the redshift over the entire cosmological
evolution, i.e., . By using a theoretical algorithm of
constructing the quintessence potential directly from the effective EoS
parameter, we derive and discuss the general features of the resulting
potential for this function. Since the parameterization here discussed
allows us to divide the parametric plane in defined regions associated to
distinct classes of dark energy models, we use the most recent observations
from type Ia supernovae, baryon acoustic oscillation peak and Cosmic Microwave
Background shift parameter to check which class is observationally prefered. We
show that the largest portion of the confidence contours lies into the region
corresponding to a possible crossing of the so-called phanton divide line at
some point of the cosmic evolution.Comment: 5 pages, 2 figures, LaTe
Observational constraints on the dark energy density evolution
We constrain the evolution of the dark energy density from Cosmic Microwave
Background, Large Scale Structure and Supernovae Ia measurements. While
Supernovae Ia are most sensitive to the equation of state of dark energy
today, the Cosmic Microwave Background and Large Scale Structure data best
constrains the dark energy evolution at earlier times. For the parametrization
used in our models, we find and the dark energy fraction at very
high redshift at 95 per cent confidence level.Comment: 5 pages, 10 figure
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