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Parameterizing Dark Energy Z. Huang, R. J. Bond, L. Kofman Canadian Institute of Theoretical Astrophysics
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w - Dark Energy Equation of State Constant w=w 0 w(a)=w 0 +w a (1-a)Principal components Data: CMB + SN + LSS + WL + Lya Code: modified cosmomc w 0 = -0.98 ± 0.05 1 =0.12 2 =0.32 3 =0.63
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What we know about w Phenomenologically w is close to –1 at low redshift Rich information at z 4 Results depend on parametrization. Need theoretical priors. What if we start from physics?
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Use physics to solve problems When Canadian plug does not fit UK socket…
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Dynamics of Quintessence/Phantom we do need assumptions simplicity of w(a). simplicity of V(φ).
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Dynamics of Quintessence/Phantom define Field equation+ Friedmann Equations Popular story of quintessence: Fast rolling (large V ) in early universe (scaling regime); Slow rolling (small V ) in late universe.
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Simplicity assumptions 1.V( ) is monotonic. 2.Quintessence rolls down (dV/dt 0). 3.w is close to -1 at low redshift. Quantitatively, |1+w|<0.4 at 0<z<1. 4.V( ) is a “simple” function. Quantitatively, | V | is less than or of the same order of either Planck scale or V. examples, V( ) = V 0 exp(- ) V( ) = V 0 + V 1 V( ) = V 0 n (n=0,±1, ±2, ±3,…) In the relevant redshift range (e.g. 0<z<4),
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1-parameter parametrization Additional assumption: slow-roll at 0<z<10 (initial velocity Hubble-damped at low redshift). where s >0, quintessence s =0, cosmological constant s <0, phantom CMB + SN + LSS + WL + Lya “average slope” s =
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Initial velocity is damped by Hubble friction
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Time variation of V is not important Given solution w(a) and V (a), define trajectory variables: s = V uniformly averaged at 1/3<a<1. w = (1+w)/f(a/a eq ). (remind: 1-param formula is w fit =-1+ s f(a/a eq ))
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Constraint Equation Define w 0 =w| a=1, w a =-dw/da| a=1 w 0 and w a are functions of ( s, Ω m ). Numerical fitting yields
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binned SNe samples (192 samples) Some w 0 -w a mimic cosmological constant
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2-parameter parametrization Assumption: slow-roll at 0<z<2 (with possible non-damped velocity). Hubble damping term CMB + SN + LSS + WL + Lya
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2-parameter parametrization - residual velocity at low redshift.
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3-parameter parametrization In general V varies. Assuming no oscillation, we model Other corrections can only be numerically fitted: redefine a eq. O(θ 3 ) term numerical fitting. a s - s power suppression (if s and a s are both large, the power of Hubble damping term would be suppressed). When all smoke clears
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3-parameter parametrization
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3-parameter fitting Perfectly fits slow-to-moderate roll.
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Fit wild rising trajectories
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Measuring 3 parameters Use 3-parameter for 0 4)=w h (free parameter).
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Comparing 1-2-3-parameter 1-parameter: use 1-param formula for all redshift. 2-parameter: use 2-param formula for 0 2)=w h (free constant). 3-parameter: use 3-param formula for 0 4)=w h (free constant). Conclusion: all the complications are irrelevant, now only can measure s CMB + SN + WL + LSS +Lya
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Forecast: Planck + JDEM SN + DUNE WL
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Thawing, freezing or non-monotonic? Thawing: w monotonically deviate from -1. Freezing: w monotonically approaches -1. Our parameterization with flat priors. Roughly 15 percent thawing, 8 percent freezing, most are non-monotonic. With freezing prior: With thawing prior:
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Conclusions For a wide class of quintessence/phantom models, the functional form V(φ) in the near future is observationally immeasurable. Only a key trajectory parameter s = (1/16πG) can be well measured. The second parameter a s can only be constrained to be less than ~0.3. For current observational data, even with (physically motivated) dynamic w(a) parametrization, cosmological constant remains to be the best and simplest model.
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