242 research outputs found
Cosmology with massive neutrinos coupled to dark energy
Cosmological consequences of a coupling between massive neutrinos and dark energy are investigated. In such models, the neutrino mass is a function of a scalar field, which plays the role of dark energy. The evolution of the background and cosmological perturbations are discussed. We find that mass-varying neutrinos can leave a significant imprint on the anisotropies in the cosmic microwave background and even lead to a reduction of power on large angular scales
Scalar field dark energy and Cosmic Microwave Background
A dynamical scalar field represents the simplest generalization of a pure
Cosmological Constant as a candidate to explain the recent evidence in favour
of the accelerated cosmic expansion. We review the dynamical properties of such
a component, and argue that, even if the background expectation value of this
field is fixed and the equation of state is the same as a Cosmological
Constant, scalar field fluctuations can still be used to distinguish the two
components. We compare predicted spectra of Cosmic Microvave Background (CMB)
anisotropies in tracking scalar field cosmologies with the present CMB data, in
order to get constraints on the amount and equation of state of dark energy.
High precision experiments like SNAP, {\sc Planck} and {\sc SNfactory},
together with the data on Large Scale Structure, are needed to probe this issue
with the necessary accuracy. Here we show the intriguing result that, with a
strong prior on the value of the Hubble constant today, the assumption of a
flat universe, and consistency relations between amplitude and spectral index
of primordial gravitational waves, the present CMB data at give
indication of a dark energy equation of state larger than -1, while the
ordinary Cosmological Constant is recovered at .Comment: 4 pages including 2 figures, Dark Matter 2002 proceedings,
Nucl.Phys.B in pres
Cosmology with CMB anisotropy
Measurements of CMB anisotropy and, more recently, polarization have played a
very important role allowing precise determination of various parameters of the
`standard' cosmological model. The expectation of the paradigm of inflation and
the generic prediction of the simplest realization of inflationary scenario in
the early universe have also been established -- `acausally' correlated initial
perturbations in a flat, statistically isotropic universe, adiabatic nature of
primordial density perturbations. Direct evidence for gravitational instability
mechanism for structure formation from primordial perturbations has been
established. In the next decade, future experiments promise to strengthen these
deductions and uncover the remaining crucial signature of inflation -- the
primordial gravitational wave background.Comment: Plenary talk at the IXth. International Workshop on High Energy
Physics Phenomenology (WHEPP-9), Institute of Physics, Bhubaneshwar, India.
Jan 3-14, 2006; To appear in the Proceedings to be published in Pramana; 12
pages, 2 figure
Primordial Neutrinos, Cosmological Perturbations in Interacting Dark-Energy Model: CMB and LSS
We present cosmological perturbation theory in neutrinos probe interacting
dark-energy models, and calculate cosmic microwave background anisotropies and
matter power spectrum. In these models, the evolution of the mass of neutrinos
is determined by the quintessence scalar field, which is responsible for the
cosmic acceleration today. We consider several types of scalar field potentials
and put constraints on the coupling parameter between neutrinos and dark
energy. Assuming the flatness of the universe, the constraint we can derive
from the current observation is at the 95 % confidence
level for the sum over three species of neutrinos. We also discuss on the
stability issue of the our model and on the impact of the scattering term in
Boltzmann equation from the mass-varying neutrinos.Comment: 26 pages Revtex, 11 figures, Add new contents and reference
The Adiabatic Instability on Cosmology's Dark Side
We consider theories with a nontrivial coupling between the matter and dark
energy sectors. We describe a small scale instability that can occur in such
models when the coupling is strong compared to gravity, generalizing and
correcting earlier treatments. The instability is characterized by a negative
sound speed squared of an effective coupled dark matter/dark energy fluid. Our
results are general, and applicable to a wide class of coupled models and
provide a powerful, redshift-dependent tool, complementary to other
constraints, with which to rule many of them out. A detailed analysis and
applications to a range of models are presented in a longer companion paper.Comment: 4 pages, 1 figur
Primordial Power Spectrum Reconstruction
In order to reconstruct the initial conditions of the universe it is
important to devise a method that can efficiently constrain the shape of the
power spectrum of primordial matter density fluctuations in a model-independent
way from data. In an earlier paper we proposed a method based on the wavelet
expansion of the primordial power spectrum. The advantage of this method is
that the orthogonality and multiresolution properties of wavelet basis
functions enable information regarding the shape of to be
encoded in a small number of non-zero coefficients. Any deviation from
scale-invariance can then be easily picked out. Here we apply this method to
simulated data to demonstrate that it can accurately reconstruct an input
, and present a prescription for how this method should be used
on future data.Comment: 4 pages, 2 figures. JCAP accepted versio
CFHTLS weak-lensing constraints on the neutrino masses
We use measurements of cosmic shear from CFHTLS, combined with WMAP-5 cosmic
microwave background anisotropy data, baryonic acoustic oscillations from SDSS
and 2dFGRS and supernovae data from SNLS and Gold-set, to constrain the
neutrino mass. We obtain a 95% confidence level upper limit of 0.54 eV for the
sum of the neutrino masses, and a lower limit of 0.03 eV. The preference for
massive neutrinos vanishes when shear-measurement systematics are included in
the analysis.Comment: 10 pages. Published versio
Mass-Varying Neutrinos from a Variable Cosmological Constant
We consider, in a completely model-independent way, the transfer of energy
between the components of the dark energy sector consisting of the cosmological
constant (CC) and that of relic neutrinos. We show that such a cosmological
setup may promote neutrinos to mass-varying particles, thus resembling a
recently proposed scenario of Fardon, Nelson, and Weiner (FNW), but now without
introducing any acceleronlike scalar fields. Although a formal similarity of
the FNW scenario with the variable CC one can be easily established, one
nevertheless finds different laws for neutrino mass variation in each scenario.
We show that as long as the neutrino number density dilutes canonically, only a
very slow variation of the neutrino mass is possible. For neutrino masses to
vary significantly (as in the FNW scenario), a considerable deviation from the
canonical dilution of the neutrino number density is also needed. We note that
the present `coincidence' between the dark energy density and the neutrino
energy density can be obtained in our scenario even for static neutrino masses.Comment: 8 pages, minor corrections, two references added, to apear in JCA
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