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Title: Observational Cosmology


1
Observational Cosmology
  • Tom Shanks
  • Durham University

2
Summary
  • Review observational evidence for standard
    cosmological model - ?CDM
  • Then review its outstanding problems -
    astrophysical fundamental
  • Briefly look at difficulties in finding an
    alternative model
  • Conclude - whether ?CDM is right or wrong - its
    an interesting time for cosmology!

3
Observational cosmology supports ?CDM!
  • Boomerang WMAP CMB experiments detect acoustic
    peak at l220(1deg)
  • ? Spatially flat, CDM Universe (de Bernardis et
    al. 2000, Spergel et al 2003, 2006)
  • SNIa Hubble Diagram requires an accelerating
    Universe with a cosmological constant, ?
  • ?CDM also fits galaxy and QSO clustering results
    (e.g. Cole et al 2005)

4
(No Transcript)
5
WMAP 3-Year CMB Map
6
WMAP 3-Year Power Spectrum
Spatially flat, (k0) universe comprising 72
Dark Energy 24 CDM 4 Baryons (Hinshaw et al.
2003, 2006, Spergel et al. 2003, 2006)
7
Supernova Cosmology
  • SNIa 0.5mag fainter than expected at z1 if ?m1
  • ? Universe flat (k0) accelerating with ??0.7
  • Vacuum/ Dark energy eqn of state

distance modulus
Credits ESSENCE Supernova Legacy Survey HST
Gold Sample
8
AAT 2dF Redshift Surveys
  • 2dF 400 fibres over 3deg2 -50 x bigger field
    than VLT vs 4x smaller mirror
  • 2dF galaxy and QSO z survey clustering also
    supports ?CDM

9
2dF Galaxy Redshift Survey
10
2dFGRS Power Spectrum
  • 2dFGRS power spectrum from 250000 galaxies
    (Cole et al 2005)
  • Results fit?CDM

11
The 2dF QSO Redshift Survey
23340 QSOs observed
12
2dF QSO Power Spectrum
LCDM Input Spectrum
  • Observed QSO P(k) also agrees with LCDM Mock QSO
    Catalogue from Hubble Volume simulation
  • Outram et al 2003

Hubble Volume ?1?
500h-1Mpc
50h-1Mpc
13
SDSS
DR5Million Spectra, 8000 sq degs Extension
(2005-2008) Legacy, SNe, Galaxy
14
Baryon Acoustic Oscillations (BAO) as a standard
ruler
  • Detections of BAOs in the galaxy power spectrum
    at low redshift (e.g. Cole et al.,2004, Tegmark
    et al.,2006) and the Luminous Red Galaxy
    Correlation Function (Eisenstein et al., 2005) at
    2-3s
  • Many large projects and studies propose to use
    BAOs in survey volume of Gpc3 as a standard
    ruler (DES, WFMOS, WiggleZ) to study Dark Energy
    Equation of State . (w -1 for
    cosmological constant)

15
2SLAQ LRG Wedge Plot
16
SDSS LRG correlation function
  • Correlation function from 45000 SDSS Luminous Red
    Galaxies - LRGs (Eisenstein et al 2005 - see also
    Cole et al 2005)
  • Detects Baryon Acoustic Oscillation (BAO) at
    s100h-1 Mpc from z0.35 LRGs

17
First Baryon Wiggles in 1985
  • ?(s) from 500 Durham/AAT Z Survey Blt17 galaxies
    (Shanks et al 1985)
  • First detection of baryon wiggles
  • But not detected in Durham/UKST or 2QZ surveys

18
Photometric redshifts
  • Today - photo-z available from imaging surveys
    such as SDSS
  • Redshift accuracy typically ?z?0.05 or ?150Mpc
    for Luminous Red Galaxies even from colour cuts
  • Use photo-z to detect BAO and also Integrated
    Sachs Wolfe Effect

19
Integrated Sachs Wolfe (ISW)
Physical detection of Dark Energy Influencing
the growth of structure
In a flat matter-dominated universe, photon
blueshift and redshift on entering and leaving
cluster cancels but not if DE acceleration.
Results in net higher temperature near overdensity
20
WMAP-SDSS cross-correlation
WMAP W band
Luminous Red Galaxies (LRGs)
No ISW signal in a flat, matter dominated Universe
21
ISW SDSS LRGs-WMAP
  • Cross-correlation of SDSS LRGs and WMAP CMB
    suggests direct evidence of Dark Energy (Scranton
    et al 2005)
  • Many caveats but various surveys now aimed at BAO
    and ISW using spectroscopic and photo-z LRG
    samples

22
And yet.
23
Astrophysical Problems for ?CDM
  • Too much small scale power in mass distribution?
  • Mass profile of LSB galaxies less sharply peaked
    than predicted by CDM (Moore et al, 1999a)
  • Instability of spiral disks to disruption by CDM
    sub-haloes (Moore et al, 1999b)
  • Observed galaxy LF is much flatter than predicted
    by CDM - even with feedback (eg Bower et al,
    2006).
  • ?CDM?Massive galaxies form late vs. downsizing
  • Slope of galaxy correlation function is flatter
    than predicted by ?CDM mass ?? anti-bias ?
    simple high peaks bias disallowed (eg Cole et
    al, 1998)
  • LX-T relation ? galaxy clusters not scale-free?

24
Joe Silks ?CDM issues(2005)
25
CDM Mass Function v Galaxy LF
  • CDM halo mass function is steeper than faint
    galaxy LF
  • Various forms of feedback are invoked to try and
    explain this issue away
  • Gravitational galaxy formation theory becomes a
    feedback theory!

CDM haloes
(from Benson et al 2003)
26
CDM Mergers vs Observation
  • ?CDM requires large amount of hierarchical
    merging at zlt1 due to flat slope of power
    spectrum
  • ?CDM ? E/S0 (d10kpc) at z0 scattered over
    1Mpc at z1
  • But latest observations show little evidence of
    strong dynamical evolution

27
No evolution seen for zlt1 early-types
?CDM predicts big galaxies form late but observe
the reverse - downsizing!
28
QSO Luminosity Evolution
  • 2dF QSO Luminosity Function (Croom et al 2003)
  • Brighter QSOs at higher z
  • Again not immediately suggestive of bottom up
    ?CDM

29
Fundamental Problems for ?CDM
  • ?CDM requires 2 pieces of undiscovered physics!!!
  • ??makes model complicatedfine-tuned
  • ?? is small - after inflation, ??/?rad 1 in
    10102
  • Also, today ??? ?Matter - Why?
  • To start with one fine tuning (flatness) problem
    and end up with several - seems circular!
  • ? anthropic principle ?!?
  • CDM Particle - No Laboratory Detection
  • Optimists ? like search for neutrino!
  • Pessimists ??like search for E-M ether!

30
Dark Energy - bad for Astronomy?
  • Simon White arguing against devoting too many
    resources to chasing DE
  • Argues on basis of general utility of telescopes
  • But not a ringing vote of confidence in DE!!!

astro-ph/0704.2291
31
Ed Witten -Strings 2001
String theory prefers a negative ? (anti-de
Sitter!) rather than the observed positive ?
http//theory.tifr.res.in/strings/Proceedings/witt
en/22.html
32
Fundamental Problems for ?CDM
  • ?CDM requires 2 pieces of undiscovered physics!!!
  • ??makes model complicatedfine-tuned
  • ?? is small - after inflation, ??/?rad 1 in
    10102
  • Also, today ??? ?Matter - Why?
  • To start with one fine tuning (flatness) problem
    and end up with several - seems circular!
  • ? anthropic principle ?!?
  • CDM Particle - No Laboratory Detection
  • Optimists ? like search for neutrino!
  • Pessimists ??like search for E-M ether!

33
XENON10 CDMS2 Limits
  • Best previous upper limits on mass of CDM
    particle from direct detection - CDMS2 in Soudan
    Underground lab (Akerib et al 2004)
  • Now further improved by 3 months data from
    XENON10 experiment - (Angle et al
    astro-ph/0706.0039)

34
MSSM Neutralino Excluded?
allowed by WMAP
CDMS2 direct detection upper limit
XENON10 direct detection upper limit
m0, m1/2 related to masses of particles which
mix to become neutralino (Ellis et al 2007
hep-ph/0706.0977)
35
Fundamental Problems for CDM
  • Even without ?, CDM model has fine tuning since
    ?CDM ?baryon (Peebles 1985)
  • Baryonic Dark Matter needed anyway!
  • Nucleosynthesis ? ?baryon 10 x ?star
  • Also Coma DM has significant baryon component

36
Coma cluster dark matter
37
Coma galaxy cluster gas
  • Coma contains hot X-ray gas (20)
  • X-ray map of Coma from XMM-Newton (Briel et al
    2001)
  • If M/L5 then less plausible to invoke
    cosmological density of exotic particles than if
    M/L60-600!

38
H0 route to a simpler model - or Shanks road
to ruin!
  • X-Ray gas becomes Missing Mass in Coma. In
    central rlt1h-1Mpc-

Virial Mass ? 6?1014h-1Mo
Mvir/MX 15h1.5
X-ray Gas Mass ??4?1013h-2.5Mo
  • Thus Mvir/MX15 if h1.0, 5 if h0.5, 1.9 if
    h0.25

39
3 Advantages of low H0
  • Shanks (1985) - if Holt30kms-1Mpc-1 then
  • X-ray gas becomes Dark Matter in Coma
  • Inflationary ?baryon1 model in better agreement
    with nucleosynthesis
  • Light element abundances ? ?baryonh2lt0.06
  • ???baryon ?1 starts to be allowed if h?0.3
  • InflationEdS gt ??1 gt Globular Cluster Ages of
    13-16Gyr require Holt40kms-1Mpc-1
  • But the first acoustic peak is at l330, not l220

40
Escape routes from ?CDM?
  • SNIa Hubble Diagram - Evolution?
  • Galaxy/QSO P(k) - scale dependent bias - abandon
    the assumption that galaxies trace the mass!
  • WMAP - cosmic foregrounds?
  • Galaxy Clusters - SZ inverse Compton scattering
    of CMB
  • Galaxy Clusters - lensing of CMB

41
Cluster-strong lensingshear
  • HST Advanced Camera for Surveys image of A1689 at
    z0.18 (Broadhurst et al 2006)
  • Effects of lensing recognised to be widespread
    since advent of HST high resolution images 10
    years ago

42
The 2dF QSO Redshift Survey
23340 QSOs observed
43
2dF QSO Lensing
  • Cross-correlate z2 QSOs with foreground z0.1
    galaxy groups
  • At faint QSO limit of 2dF lensing?anti-correlation
  • ? measure group masses

SDSS Galaxy Groups in 2QZ NGC area
44
2dF QSO-group lensing
  • Strong anti-correlation between 2dF QSOs and
    foreground galaxy groups
  • ?high group masses
  • ? ?M1 and/or mass clusters more strongly than
    galaxies

Myers et al 2003, 2005, Guimaraes et al, 2005,
Mountrichas Shanks 2007
45
Can lensing move 1st peak?
  • WMAP z10 Reionisation
  • QSO lensing effects of galaxies and groups from
    Myers et al (2003, 2005)
  • ? l330 ? l220
  • Still need SZ for 2nd peak!?!
  • ? other models can be fine-tuned to fit WMAP
    first peak?

Shanks, 2007, MNRAS, 376, 173
46
Conclusions
  • ?CDM gains strong support from observational
    cosmology - WMAP, SNIa, P(k)
  • But assumes undiscovered physics very
    finely-tuned problems in many other areas eg
    downsizing
  • QSO lensing ? galaxy groups have more mass than
    expected from virial theorem
  • Could smoothing of CMB by lensing give escape
    route to simpler models than ?CDM??
  • But excitement guaranteed either via exotic dark
    matterenergy or by new models

47
Implications for CMB Lensing
  • CMB lensing smoothing functions, ?(?)/?
  • Only one that improves WMAP fit is ?(?)constant
    (black line)
  • Requires ?mass?r-3 or steeper
  • Also requires anti-bias at b0.2 level
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