88 research outputs found
The equations of medieval cosmology
In Dantean cosmography the Universe is described as a series of concentric
spheres with all the known planets embedded in their rotation motion, the Earth
located at the centre and Lucifer at the centre of the Earth. Beyond these
"celestial spheres", Dante represents the "angelic choirs" as other nine
spheres surrounding God. The rotation velocity increases with decreasing
distance from God, that is with increasing Power (Virtu'). We show that, adding
Power as an additional fourth dimension to space, the modern equations
governing the expansion of a closed Universe (i. e. with the density parameter
\Omega_0>1) in the space-time, can be applied to the medieval Universe as
imaged by Dante in his Divine Comedy. In this representation the Cosmos
acquires a unique description and Lucifer is not located at the centre of the
hyperspheres.Comment: 3 pages, 1 figur
The time evolution of cosmological redshift as a test of dark energy
The variation of the expansion rate of the Universe with time produces an
evolution in the cosmological redshift of distant sources (for example quasar
Lyman- absorption lines), that might be directly observed by future
ultra stable, high-resolution spectrographs (such as CODEX) coupled to
extremely large telescopes (such as European Southern Observatory's Extremely
Large Telescope, ELT). This would open a new window to explore the physical
mechanism responsible for the current acceleration of the Universe. We
investigate the evolution of cosmological redshift from a variety of dark
energy models, and compare it with simulated data. We perform a Fisher matrix
analysis and discuss the prospects for constraining the parameters of these
models and for discriminating among competing candidates. We find that, because
of parameter degeneracies, and of the inherent technical difficulties involved
in this kind of observations, the uncertainties on parameter reconstruction can
be rather large unless strong external priors are assumed. However, the method
could be a valuable complementary cosmological tool, and give important
insights on the dynamics of dark energy, not obtainable using other probes.Comment: 9 pages, 2 figures. Matching published versio
Measuring our peculiar velocity on the CMB with high-multipole off-diagonal correlations
Our peculiar velocity with respect to the CMB rest frame is known to induce a
large dipole in the CMB. However, the motion of an observer has also the effect
of distorting the anisotropies at all scales, as shown by Challinor and Van
Leeuwen (2002), due to aberration and Doppler effects. We propose to measure
independently our local motion by using off-diagonal two-point correlation
functions for high multipoles. We study the observability of the signal for
temperature and polarization anisotropies. We point out that Planck can measure
the velocity with an error of about 30% and the direction with an error
of about 20 degrees. This method constitutes a cross-check, which can be useful
to verify that our CMB dipole is due mainly to our velocity or to disentangle
the velocity from other possible intrinsic sources. Although in this paper we
focus on our peculiar velocity, a similar effect would result also from other
intrinsic vectorial distortion of the CMB which would induce a dipolar lensing.
Measuring the off-diagonal correlation terms is therefore a test for a
preferred direction on the CMB sky.Comment: 20 pages, 4 figures. New appendix; extended analytic analysis for the
estimator; corrected expectations for EB and TB correlation
Affine parameterization of the dark sector: costraints from WMAP5 and SDSS
We study a set of universe models where the dark sector is described by a
perfect fluid with an affine equation of state , focusing
specifically on cosmological perturbations in a flat universe. We perform a
Monte Carlo Markov Chain analysis spanning the full parameter space of the
model using the WMAP 5 years data and the SDSS LRG4 survey. The affine fluid
can either play the role of a unified dark matter (UDM), accounting for both
dark matter and a cosmological constant, or work alongside cold dark matter
(CDM), as a form of dark energy. A key ingredient is the sound speed, that
depends on the nature of the fluid and that, for any given background model,
adds a degree of freedom to the perturbations: in the barotropic case the
square of the sound speed is simply equal to the affine parameter ; if
entropic perturbations are present the effective sound speed has to be
specified as an additional parameter. In addition to the barotropic case, we
consider the two limiting cases of effective sound speed equal to 0 or 1. For
our UDM model is equivalent to the standard CDM with
adiabatic perturbations. Apart of a trivial subcase, all models considered
satisfy the data constraints, with quite standard values for the usual
cosmological parameters. In general our analysis confirms that cosmological
datasets require both a collisionless massive and cold component to form the
potential wells that lead to structure formation, and an effective cosmological
constant that drives the late accelerated expansion.Comment: 10 pages, 9 figure
Real-time Cosmology
In recent years the possibility of measuring the temporal change of radial
and transverse position of sources in the sky in real time have become
conceivable thanks to the thoroughly improved technique applied to new
astrometric and spectroscopic experiments, leading to the research domain we
call Real-time cosmology. We review for the first time great part of the work
done in this field, analysing both the theoretical framework and some endeavor
to foresee the observational strategies and their capability to constrain
models. We firstly focus on real time measurements of the overall redshift
drift and angular separation shift in distant source, able to trace background
cosmic expansion and large scale anisotropy, respectively. We then examine the
possibility of employing the same kind of observations to probe peculiar and
proper acceleration in clustered systems and therefore the gravitational
potential. The last two sections are devoted to the short time future change of
the cosmic microwave background, as well as to the temporal shift of the
temperature anisotropy power spectrum and maps. We conclude revisiting in this
context the effort made to forecast the power of upcoming experiments like
CODEX, GAIA and PLANCK in providing these new observational tools.Comment: 44 pages, 23 figures. References added; revised text, tables and
plots. Accepted for publication in Physics Report
Constraints on coupled dark energy using CMB data from WMAP and SPT
We consider the case of a coupling in the dark cosmological sector, where a
dark energy scalar field modifies the gravitational attraction between dark
matter particles. We find that the strength of the coupling {\beta} is
constrained using current Cosmic Microwave Background (CMB) data, including
WMAP7 and SPT, to be less than 0.063 (0.11) at 68% (95%) confidence level.
Further, we consider the additional effect of the CMB-lensing amplitude,
curvature, effective number of relativistic species and massive neutrinos and
show that the bound from current data on {\beta} is already strong enough to be
rather stable with respect to any of these variables. The strongest effect is
obtained when we allow for massive neutrinos, in which case the bound becomes
slightly weaker, {\beta} < 0.084(0.14). A larger value of the effective number
of relativistic degrees of freedom favors larger couplings between dark matter
and dark energy as well as values of the spectral index closer to 1. Adding the
present constraints on the Hubble constant, as well as from baryon acoustic
oscillations and supernovae Ia, we find {\beta} < 0.050(0.074). In this case we
also find an interesting likelihood peak for {\beta} = 0.041 (still compatible
with 0 at 1{\sigma}). This peak comes mostly from a slight difference between
the Hubble parameter HST result and the WMAP7+SPT best fit. Finally, we show
that forecasts of Planck+SPT mock data can pin down the coupling to a precision
of better than 1% and detect whether the marginal peak we find at small non
zero coupling is a real effect.Comment: 22 pages, 17 figure
Testing coupled dark energy with next-generation large-scale observations
Coupling dark energy to dark matter provides one of the simplest way to
effectively modify gravity at large scales without strong constraints from
local (i.e. solar system) observations. Models of coupled dark energy have been
studied several times in the past and are already significantly constrained by
cosmic microwave background experiments. In this paper we estimate the
constraints that future large-scale observations will be able to put on the
coupling and in general on all the parameters of the model. We combine cosmic
microwave background, tomographic weak lensing, redshift distortions and power
spectrum probes. We show that next-generation observations can improve the
current constraint on the coupling to dark matter by two orders of magnitude;
this constraint is complementary to the current solar-system bounds on a
coupling to baryons.Comment: 18 pages, 12 figs, 8 table
Optimising Boltzmann codes for the Planck era
High precision measurements of the Cosmic Microwave Background (CMB)
anisotropies, as can be expected from the Planck satellite, will require
high-accuracy theoretical predictions as well. One possible source of
theoretical uncertainty is the numerical error in the output of the Boltzmann
codes used to calculate angular power spectra. In this work, we carry out an
extensive study of the numerical accuracy of the public Boltzmann code CAMB,
and identify a set of parameters which determine the error of its output. We
show that at the current default settings, the cosmological parameters
extracted from data of future experiments like Planck can be biased by several
tenths of a standard deviation for the six parameters of the standard
Lambda-CDM model, and potentially more seriously for extended models. We
perform an optimisation procedure that leads the code to achieve sufficient
precision while at the same time keeping the computation time within reasonable
limits. Our conclusion is that the contribution of numerical errors to the
theoretical uncertainty of model predictions is well under control -- the main
challenges for more accurate calculations of CMB spectra will be of an
astrophysical nature instead.Comment: 13 pages, 4 figure
Mapping the galactic gravitational potential with peculiar acceleration
It has been suggested recently that the change in cosmological redshift (the
Sandage test of expansion) could be observed in the next generation of large
telescopes and ultra-stable spectrographs. In a recent paper we estimated the
change of peculiar velocity, i.e. the peculiar acceleration, in nearby galaxies
and clusters and shown it to be of the same order of magnitude as the typical
cosmological signal. Mapping the acceleration field allows for a reconstruction
of the galactic gravitational potential without assuming virialization. In this
paper we focus on the peculiar acceleration in our own Galaxy, modeled as a
Kuzmin disc and a dark matter spherical halo. We estimate the peculiar
acceleration for all known Galactic globular clusters and find some cases with
an expected velocity shift in excess of 20 cm/sec for observations fifteen
years apart, well above the typical cosmological acceleration. We then compare
the predicted signal for a MOND (modified Newtonian dynamics) model in which
the spherical dark matter halo is absent. We find that the signal pattern is
qualitatively different, showing that the peculiar acceleration field could be
employed to test competing theories of gravity. However the difference seems
too small to be detectable in the near future.Comment: 11 pages, 10 figures, 3 tables, minor changes, accepted for
publication by MNRA
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