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Cosmology : a short introduction Mathieu Langer Institut d’Astrophysique Spatiale Université Paris-Sud XI Orsay, France Egyptian School on High Energy Physics CTP-BUE, Egypt 27 May – 4 June 2009
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0. What do we see ? (depends on wavelength…)
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Cosmic Microwave Background (detected 1965, Penzias & Wilson, Nobel prize 1978) (COBE data, 1996)
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Penzias & Wilson Nobel Prize 1978 First detection 1965 at 7.35 cm
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What Penzias & Wilson would have seen, had they observed the full sky Cosmological interpretation : Dicke, Peebles, Roll, Wilkinson (1965) The Milky Way
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Cosmic Microwave Background (detected 1965, Penzias & Wilson, Nobel prize 1978) (COBE data, 1996)
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The Cosmic Microwave Background : a “perfect” black body
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CMB : tiny anisotropies COBE, 1991-1996 First detection of anisotropies (Nobel prize 2006: Smoot & Mather)
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CMB : tiny anisotropies, huge information WMAP: 2003, 2006, 2008 (Launched June 2001) First fine-resolution full-sky map (0.2 degrees) -200 µK < ΔT < 200 µK
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The CMB and the geometry of the Universe Actual data (Boom., 1998) Simulated maps SphericalFlatHyperbolic Typical size : 1 o
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CMB anisotropies : angular power spectrum From temperature maps… …to power spectra…
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…to cosmological parameters and cosmic pies : Age : 13.7 billion years
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Distribution of structure on large scales Panoramic view of the entire near-infrared sky Blue : nearest galaxies Red : most distant (up to ~ 410 Mpc) (2MASS, XSC & PSC)
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Notice : isotropy & homogeneity!
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Hubble’s law, expansion of the universe V = H 0 D H 0 = 71 ± 4 km/s/Mpc (from WMAP + Structures) (Hubble, 1929) Rem : 1 parsec ~ 3.262 light years ~ 3.1×10 13 km
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Ambitious cosmology…
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Our understanding of the universe…
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1. How do we understand what we see?
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Fundamental principles Cosmological principle –Universe : spatially homogeneous & isotropic everywhere Applies to regions unreachable by observation Copernican principle –Our place is not special observations are the same for any observer –Isotropy + Copernicus homogeneity Applies to observable universe
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Maximally symmetric space-time Friedmann-Lemaître-Robertson-Walker metric equivalent to where
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Scale factor, expansion, Hubble’s law Coordinates : Scale factor a(t): Redshift & Expansion :
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Scale factor, expansion, Hubble’s law Hubble’s flow : –2 observers at comoving coordinates x 1 & x 2 –Physical distance : –Separation velocity : Proper velocities –Galaxy moving relative to space fabric x not constant –Velocity : scatter in Hubble’s law for nearby galaxies
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Dynamics : Einstein, Friedmann, etc. Einstein equations : geometry energy content Friedmann equations : dynamics of the Universe Stress-energy tensor: Expansion rate Variation of H
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Dynamics and cosmological parameters Critical density : put k = 0 today(cf. measurements!) Density parameters : Equation of state : for each fluid i : p i = w i ρ i and today: Photons : p = ρ/3 w r =1/3 Matter : ρ = m n, p = nkT ρ w m = 0
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Dynamics of the Universe Friedmann equations –expansion –variation –acceleration Matter-Energy conservation : so clearly (Rem: only 2 independent equations)
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Evolution of a given fluid : Conservation equation gives Summary : * assume w i constant, * integrate Matter :Ω m = Ω m,0 a -3 = Ω m,0 (1+z) 3 Radiation :Ω r = Ω r,0 a -4 = Ω r,0 (1+z) 4 Cosm. Const.:Ω Λ = Ω Λ,0 Rem : C.C. w Λ = -1
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Universe Expansion History Matter-radiation equality Expansion history wrt. dominant fluid Radiation dom. : a(t) t 1/2 Matter dom.: a(t) t 2/3 C.C. dom.: a(t) exp (H 0 t) for z z eq : Universe dominated by radiation (from WMAP)
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Universe Expansion History Acceleration wrt. fluid equation of state of dominant fluid Deceleration Acceleration Observed accelerationnegative pressure Observed acceleration requires exotic fluid with negative pressure! Matter and radiation OK
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Back to the CMB… time, age radiation & matter in thermal equilibrium radiation & matter live separate lives density, z, T
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CMB : Primordial Photons’ Last Scattering time, age radiation & matter in equilibrium via tight coupling radiation & matter are decoupled, no interaction density, z, T CMB z =1100 380 000 years (Planck)
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The CMB : a snapshot of the Baby Universe
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