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Published byRoss Flynn Modified over 9 years ago
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The measurement of q 0 If objects are observed at large distances of known brightness (standard candles), we can measure the amount of deceleration since this governs the size of the universe At z=0.5 (d=6000 Mpc), difference in observed brightness of a “standard candle” between a flat matter-filled universe and an empty matter-filled universe is 25% - universe will be larger if it is empty and thus the objects will be further away and fainter.
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Best standard candle is Type Ia supernova Observed scatter in their intrinsic brightness is 15% and thus if we could measure their brightness at z=0.5, we could measure q 0 Two research groups obtained large amounts of telescope time to do this and they detected 42 Type Ia SNe up to z=0.8. Their results published in 1998 showed that the distant SNe are 25% dimmer than nearby SNe. This means that over the 8 billion years that the light has been travelling towards us, the change in the rate of expansion of the the universe must have increased not decreased. The universe is accelerating!
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The only way to explain these results is to introduce the cosmological constant Best model fit to the changing apparent brightness m B with redshift z gives (for k=0) (matter)=0.25+/-0.09 at the current epoch; and thus =0.75.
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The CMB An image of the Universe at 380,000 years old (Cosmic Microwave Background)
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Universe is hot Electrons are free Light scatters off electrons Universe is cooler e - and p + form hydrogen Light travels freely The History of the Universe Until ~380,000 years after BB
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Why Microwave? Universe was ~ 3000° K at 380,000 yr Full of visible light (~1μm) Universe is expanding Causes light to change wavelength Visible light becomes microwaves (~1cm)
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Graphic from WMAP website
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The History of CMB observations 1965 1992 2003 Discovery COBE WMAP Graphic from WMAP website
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COBE RESULTS
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COBE angular resolution ~ 10 deg
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frequency spectrum T=3.725+/-0.001 K
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BOOMERANG LAUNCH IN EARLY 2000
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BOOMERANG mapped 2.5% of the sky at a resolution 35 x COBE
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April 2000: BOOMERANG map of the CMB fluctuations
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Measurement of the peak-to-peak spacing of the anisotropies shows that they have scales of ~ 1 degree. This corresponds to 0.88 < Omega < 1.12, indicating the universe is very close to having a flat geometry.
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BOOMERANG power spectrum - Fourier transform of the data, showing that the angular scale is close to 1 degree.
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Combination of Supernovae and BOOMERANG results
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The WMAP Satellite WMAP=Wilkinson Microwave Anisotropy Probe Graphic from WMAP website
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Launch June 2001
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What WMAP saw Graphic from WMAP website
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Zooming the colour scale… 1 in 1000 Graphic from WMAP website
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Removing the effect of our motion through the galaxy Graphic from WMAP website
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An image of the Universe at 380,000 years old! Graphics from WMAP website
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A characteristic scale exists of ~ 1 degree Graphics from WMAP website
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Statistical properties Spherical harmonic transform ~Fourier transform Quantifies clumpiness on different scales
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