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Cosmology

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Articles 31 - 60 of 75

Full-Text Articles in Physical Sciences and Mathematics

Testing Lorentz Symmetry With Planetary Orbital Dynamics, A. Hees, Q. G. Bailey, C. Le Poncin-Lafitte, A. Bourgoin, A. Rivoldini, B. Lamine, F. Meynadier, C. Guerlin, P. Wolf Sep 2015

Testing Lorentz Symmetry With Planetary Orbital Dynamics, A. Hees, Q. G. Bailey, C. Le Poncin-Lafitte, A. Bourgoin, A. Rivoldini, B. Lamine, F. Meynadier, C. Guerlin, P. Wolf

Publications

Planetary ephemerides are a very powerful tool to constrain deviations from the theory of general relativity (GR) using orbital dynamics. The effective field theory framework called the Standard-Model Extension (SME) has been developed in order to systematically parametrize hypothetical violations of Lorentz symmetry (in the Standard Model and in the gravitational sector). In this communication, we use the latest determinations of the supplementary advances of the perihelia and of the nodes obtained by planetary ephemerides analysis to constrain SME coefficients from the pure gravity sector and also from gravity-matter couplings. Our results do not show any deviation from GR and …


Constraining The Redshift Evolution Of The Cosmic Microwave Background Blackbody Temperature With Plank Data, I. De Martino, R. Génova-Santos, F. Atrio-Barandela, H. Ebeling, A. Kashlinsky, Dale D. Kocevski, C. J. A. P. Martins Jul 2015

Constraining The Redshift Evolution Of The Cosmic Microwave Background Blackbody Temperature With Plank Data, I. De Martino, R. Génova-Santos, F. Atrio-Barandela, H. Ebeling, A. Kashlinsky, Dale D. Kocevski, C. J. A. P. Martins

Physics and Astronomy Faculty Publications

We constrain the deviation of adiabatic evolution of the universe using the data on the cosmic microwave background (CMB) temperature anisotropies measured by the Planck satellite and a sample of 481 X-ray selected clusters with spectroscopically measured redshifts. To avoid antenna beam effects, we bring all of the maps to the same resolution. We use a CMB template to subtract the cosmological signal while preserving the Thermal Sunyaev–Zeldovich (TSZ) anisotropies; next, we remove galactic foreground emissions around each cluster and we mask out all known point sources. If the CMB blackbody temperature scales with redshift as T(z) …


Supermassive Black Hole Formation At High Redshifts Via Direct Collapse In A Cosmological Context, Jun-Hwan Choi, Isaac Shlosman, Mitchell C. Begelman Jul 2015

Supermassive Black Hole Formation At High Redshifts Via Direct Collapse In A Cosmological Context, Jun-Hwan Choi, Isaac Shlosman, Mitchell C. Begelman

Physics and Astronomy Faculty Publications

We study the early stage of the formation of seed supermassive black holes via direct collapse in dark matter (DM) haloes, in the cosmological context. We perform high-resolution zoom-in simulations of such collapse at high z. Using the adaptive mesh refinement code enzo, we resolve the formation and growth of a DM halo, until its virial temperature reaches ∼104 K, atomic cooling turns on, and collapse ensues. We demonstrate that direct collapse proceeds in two stages, although they are not well separated. The first stage is triggered by the onset of atomic cooling, and leads to rapidly increasing …


Schwarzschild Spacetime And Friedmann-Lemaitre-Robertson-Walker Cosmology, Zachary Cohen May 2015

Schwarzschild Spacetime And Friedmann-Lemaitre-Robertson-Walker Cosmology, Zachary Cohen

Honors Scholar Theses

The advent of General Relativity via Einstein's field equations revolutionized our understanding of gravity in our solar system and universe. The idea of General Relativity posits that gravity is entirely due to the geometry of the universe -- that is, the mass distribution throughout the universe results in the "curving" of spacetime, which gives us the physics we see on a large scale. In the framework of General Relativity, we find that the universe behaves differently than was predicted in the model of gravitation developed by Newton. We will derive the general relativistic model for a simple system near a …


Supernatural Cosmic Origins: Challenging The Reigning Paradigm, Rachel Blattner Apr 2015

Supernatural Cosmic Origins: Challenging The Reigning Paradigm, Rachel Blattner

Senior Honors Theses

Contemporary scientific study primarily uses a paradigm based upon naturalism, materialism, and empiricism on which to base research. The widely accepted cosmological model the big bang theory adheres to this paradigm. Despite many weaknesses in this model and in the paradigm itself, researchers continue to favor the modification of the accepted model over the adoption of other more comprehensive models. The paradigm from which the models proposed by Russell Humphries, John Hartnett, and Jason Lisle come justifies the six-day creation young-earth biblical account and better fits observational evidence with fewer arbitrary assumptions than the paradigm from which the big bang …


Gravitational Wave Background In The Quasi-Steady State Cosmology, Sree Ram Valluri, Sayantan Auddy, J V. Narlikar, S V. Dhurandhar, R G. Vishwakarma Apr 2015

Gravitational Wave Background In The Quasi-Steady State Cosmology, Sree Ram Valluri, Sayantan Auddy, J V. Narlikar, S V. Dhurandhar, R G. Vishwakarma

Physics and Astronomy Publications

This paper calculates the expected gravitational wave background (GWB) in the quasi-steady state cosmology (QSSC). The principal sources of gravitational waves in the QSSC are the mini-creation events (MCE). With suitable assumptions the GWB can be computed both numerically and with analytical methods. It is argued that the GWB in QSSC differs from that predicted for the standard cosmology and a future technology of detectors will be able to decide between the two predictions. We also derive a formula for the flux density of a typical extragalactic source of gravitational waves.


Spectroscopic Needs For Imaging Dark Energy Experiments, Jeffrey A. Newman, Alexandra Abate, Filipe B. Abdalla, Sahar Allam, Steven W. Allen, Réza Ansari, Stephen Bailey, Wayne A. Barkhouse, Timothy C. Beers, Michael R. Blanton, Mark Brodwin, Joel R. Brownstein, Robert J. Brunner, Matias Carrasco Kind, Jorge L. Cervantes-Cota, Elliott Cheu, Nora Elisa Chisari, Matthew Colless, Johan Comparat, Jean Coupon, Carlos E. Cunha, Axel De La Macorra, Ian P. Dell'antonio, Brenda L. Frye, Eric J. Gawiser, Neil Gehrels, Kevin Grady, Alex Hagen, Patrick B. Hall, Andrew P. Hearin, Hendrik Hildebrandt, Christopher M. Hirata, Shirley Ho, Klaus Honscheid, Dragan Huterer, Željko Ivezić, Jean-Paul Kneib, Jeffrey W. Kruk, Ofer Lahav, Rachel Mandelbaum, Jennifer L. Marshall, Daniel J. Matthews, Brice Ménard, Ramon Miquel, Marc Moniez, H. W. Moos, John Moustakas, Adam D. Myers, Casey Popovich, John A. Peacock, Changbom Park, Mubdi Rahman, Jason Rhodes, Jean-Stephane Ricol, Iftach Sadeh, Anže Slozar, Samuel J. Schmidt, Daniel K. Stern, J. Anthony Tyson, Anja Von Der Linden, Risa H. Wechsler, W. M. Wood-Vasey, Andrew R. Zentner Mar 2015

Spectroscopic Needs For Imaging Dark Energy Experiments, Jeffrey A. Newman, Alexandra Abate, Filipe B. Abdalla, Sahar Allam, Steven W. Allen, Réza Ansari, Stephen Bailey, Wayne A. Barkhouse, Timothy C. Beers, Michael R. Blanton, Mark Brodwin, Joel R. Brownstein, Robert J. Brunner, Matias Carrasco Kind, Jorge L. Cervantes-Cota, Elliott Cheu, Nora Elisa Chisari, Matthew Colless, Johan Comparat, Jean Coupon, Carlos E. Cunha, Axel De La Macorra, Ian P. Dell'antonio, Brenda L. Frye, Eric J. Gawiser, Neil Gehrels, Kevin Grady, Alex Hagen, Patrick B. Hall, Andrew P. Hearin, Hendrik Hildebrandt, Christopher M. Hirata, Shirley Ho, Klaus Honscheid, Dragan Huterer, Željko Ivezić, Jean-Paul Kneib, Jeffrey W. Kruk, Ofer Lahav, Rachel Mandelbaum, Jennifer L. Marshall, Daniel J. Matthews, Brice Ménard, Ramon Miquel, Marc Moniez, H. W. Moos, John Moustakas, Adam D. Myers, Casey Popovich, John A. Peacock, Changbom Park, Mubdi Rahman, Jason Rhodes, Jean-Stephane Ricol, Iftach Sadeh, Anže Slozar, Samuel J. Schmidt, Daniel K. Stern, J. Anthony Tyson, Anja Von Der Linden, Risa H. Wechsler, W. M. Wood-Vasey, Andrew R. Zentner

Physics Faculty Publications

Ongoing and near-future imaging-based dark energy experiments are critically dependent upon photometric redshifts (a.k.a. photo-z’s): i.e., estimates of the redshifts of objects based only on flux information obtained through broad filters. Higher-quality, lower-scatter photo-z’s will result in smaller random errors on cosmological parameters; while systematic errors in photometric redshift estimates, if not constrained, may dominate all other uncertainties from these experiments. The desired optimization and calibration is dependent upon spectroscopic measurements for secure redshift information; this is the key application of galaxy spectroscopy for imaging-based dark energy experiments.

Hence, to achieve their full potential, imaging-based experiments …


Short-Range Gravity And Lorentz Violation, Quentin G. Bailey, V. Alan Kostelecký, Rui Xu Jan 2015

Short-Range Gravity And Lorentz Violation, Quentin G. Bailey, V. Alan Kostelecký, Rui Xu

Publications

Comparatively few searches have been performed for violations of local Lorentz invariance in the pure-gravity sector. We show that tests of short-range gravity are sensitive to a broad class of unconstrained and novel signals that depend on the experimental geometry and on sidereal time.


Gemini Long-Slit Observations Of Luminous Obscured Quasars: Further Evidence For An Upper Limit On The Size Of The Narrow-Line Region, Kevin N. Hainline, Ryan C. Hickox, Jenny E. Greene, Adam D. Myers May 2014

Gemini Long-Slit Observations Of Luminous Obscured Quasars: Further Evidence For An Upper Limit On The Size Of The Narrow-Line Region, Kevin N. Hainline, Ryan C. Hickox, Jenny E. Greene, Adam D. Myers

Dartmouth Scholarship

We examine the spatial extent of the narrow-line regions (NLRs) of a sample of 30 luminous obscured quasars at 0.4 < z < 0.7 observed with spatially resolved Gemini-N GMOS long-slit spectroscopy. Using the [O III] λ5007 emission feature, we estimate the size of the NLR using a cosmology-independent measurement: the radius where the surface brightness falls to 10–15 erg s–1 cm–2 arcsec–2. We then explore the effects of atmospheric seeing on NLR size measurements and conclude that direct measurements of the NLR size from observed profiles are too large by 0.1-0.2 dex on average, as compared to measurements made to best-fit Sérsic or Voigt profiles convolved with the seeing. These data, which span a full order of magnitude in IR luminosity (log (L 8 μm/erg s–1) = 44.4-45.4), …


Lensed Type Ia Supernovae As Probes Of Cluster Mass Models, J Nordin, David Rubin, J Richard, E Rykoff, Greg Aldering, R Amanullah, H Atek, K Barbary, S Deustua, H K. Fakhouri, A S. Fruchter, A Goobar, I Hook, E Y. Hsiao, Xiaosheng Huang, J P. Kneib, C Lidman, J Meyers, S Perlmutter, C Saunders, A L. Spadafora, N Suzuki Apr 2014

Lensed Type Ia Supernovae As Probes Of Cluster Mass Models, J Nordin, David Rubin, J Richard, E Rykoff, Greg Aldering, R Amanullah, H Atek, K Barbary, S Deustua, H K. Fakhouri, A S. Fruchter, A Goobar, I Hook, E Y. Hsiao, Xiaosheng Huang, J P. Kneib, C Lidman, J Meyers, S Perlmutter, C Saunders, A L. Spadafora, N Suzuki

Physics and Astronomy

Using three magnified Type Ia supernovae (SNe Ia) detected behind CLASH (Cluster Lensing and Supernovae with Hubble) clusters, we perform a first pilot study to see whether standardizable candles can be used to calibrate cluster mass maps created from strong lensing observations. Such calibrations will be crucial when next-generation Hubble Space Telescope cluster surveys (e.g. Frontier) provide magnification maps that will, in turn, form the basis for the exploration of the high-redshift Universe. We classify SNe using combined photometric and spectroscopic observations, finding two of the three to be clearly of Type Ia and the third probable. The SNe exhibit …


Magnetic Inhibition Of Convection And The Fundamental Properties Of Low-Mass Stars. I. Stars With A Radiative Core, Gregory A. Feiden, Brian Chaboyer Dec 2013

Magnetic Inhibition Of Convection And The Fundamental Properties Of Low-Mass Stars. I. Stars With A Radiative Core, Gregory A. Feiden, Brian Chaboyer

Dartmouth Scholarship

Magnetic fields are hypothesized to inflate the radii of low-mass stars—defined as less massive than 0.8 M —in detached eclipsing binaries (DEBs). We investigate this hypothesis using the recently introduced magnetic Dartmouth stellar evolution code. In particular, we focus on stars thought to have a radiative core and convective outer envelope by studying in detail three individual DEBs: UV Psc, YY Gem, and CU Cnc. Our results suggest that the stabilization of thermal convection by a magnetic field is a plausible explanation for the observed model-radius discrepancies. However, surface magnetic field strengths required by the models are significantly stronger …


Field Localization And The Nambu-Jona-Lasinio Mass Generation Mechanism In An Alternative 5-Dimensional Brane Model, Preston Jones, Gerardo Muñoz, Douglas Singleton, Triyanta Jul 2013

Field Localization And The Nambu-Jona-Lasinio Mass Generation Mechanism In An Alternative 5-Dimensional Brane Model, Preston Jones, Gerardo Muñoz, Douglas Singleton, Triyanta

Publications

We consider a five-dimensional brane world model with a single brane which is distinct from the well known Randall-Sundrum model. We discuss the similarities and differences between our brane model and the Randall-Sundrum brane model. In particular we focus on the localization of five-dimensional fields with different spins—spin 0, spin 1 / 2 , and spin 1—to the brane, and a self-consistent mass-generation mechanism. We find that the brane model studied here has different (and in some cases superior) localization properties for fields/particles with different spins to the brane, as compared to the original five-dimensional brane models. In addition this …


The Fine-Tuning Of Nomic Behavior In Multiverse Scenarios, Max Lewis Edward Andrews May 2013

The Fine-Tuning Of Nomic Behavior In Multiverse Scenarios, Max Lewis Edward Andrews

Masters Theses

The multiverse hypothesis (the view that there is not just one world or universe in existence, bur rather that there are many) is the leading alternative to the competing fine-tuning hypothesis (the laws of physics and constants are fine-tuned for the existence of life). The multiverse dispels many aspects of the fine-tuning argument by suggesting that there are different initial conditions in each universe, varying constants of physics, and the laws of nature lose their known arbitrary values; thus, making the previous single-universe argument from fine- tuning incredibly weak. The position that will be advocated will be that a form …


Entropic Measure For Localized Energy Configurations: Kinks, Bounces, And Bubbles, Marcelo Gleiser, Nikitas Stamatopoulos Jul 2012

Entropic Measure For Localized Energy Configurations: Kinks, Bounces, And Bubbles, Marcelo Gleiser, Nikitas Stamatopoulos

Dartmouth Scholarship

No abstract provided.


The Hidden “Agn Main Sequence”: Evidence For A Universal Black Hole Accretion To Star Formation Rate Ratio Since Z ∼ 2 Producing An M Bh - M * Relation, J. R. Mullaney, E. Daddi, M. Béthermin, D. Elbaz, S. Juneau, M. Pannella, M. T. Sargent, D. M. Alexander, R. C. Hickox Jun 2012

The Hidden “Agn Main Sequence”: Evidence For A Universal Black Hole Accretion To Star Formation Rate Ratio Since Z ∼ 2 Producing An M Bh - M * Relation, J. R. Mullaney, E. Daddi, M. Béthermin, D. Elbaz, S. Juneau, M. Pannella, M. T. Sargent, D. M. Alexander, R. C. Hickox

Dartmouth Scholarship

Using X-ray stacking analyses we estimate the average amounts of supermassive black hole (SMBH) growth taking place in star-forming galaxies at z ~ 1 and z ~ 2 as a function of galaxy stellar mass (M *). We find that the average SMBH growth rate follows remarkably similar trends with M * and redshift as the average star formation rates (SFRs) of their host galaxies (i.e., \dot{M}_BH vprop M * 0.86 ± 0.39 for the z ~ 1 sample and \dot{M}_BH vprop M * 1.05 ± 0.36 for the z ~ 2 sample). It follows that the ratio of …


Supersolar Metal Abundances In Two Galaxies At Z ∼ 3.57 Revealed By The Grb 090323 Afterglow Spectrum, S. Savaglio, A. Rau, J. Greiner, T. Kruhler, S. Mcbreen, D.H. Hartmann, Adria Updike, R. Filgas, S. Klose, P. Afonso, C. Clemens, A. Kupcu Yoldas, F. Olivares E., V. Sudilovsky, G. Szokoly Jan 2012

Supersolar Metal Abundances In Two Galaxies At Z ∼ 3.57 Revealed By The Grb 090323 Afterglow Spectrum, S. Savaglio, A. Rau, J. Greiner, T. Kruhler, S. Mcbreen, D.H. Hartmann, Adria Updike, R. Filgas, S. Klose, P. Afonso, C. Clemens, A. Kupcu Yoldas, F. Olivares E., V. Sudilovsky, G. Szokoly

Arts & Sciences Faculty Publications

No abstract provided.


Everything Is Entangled, Roman V. Buniy, Stephen D. H. Hsu Jan 2012

Everything Is Entangled, Roman V. Buniy, Stephen D. H. Hsu

Mathematics, Physics, and Computer Science Faculty Articles and Research

We show that big bang cosmology implies a high degree of entanglement of particles in the universe. In fact, a typical particle is entangled with many particles far outside our horizon. However, the entanglement is spread nearly uniformly so that two randomly chosen particles are unlikely to be directly entangled with each other - the reduced density matrix describing any pair is likely to be separable.


The Hubble Space Telescope * Cluster Supernova Survey. Ii. The Type Ia Supernova Rate In High-Redshift Galaxy Clusters, K Barbary, G Aldering, R Amanullah, M Brodwin, N Connolly, Ks Dawson, M Doi, P Eisenhardt, L Faccioli, V Fadeyev, Hk Fakhouri, As Fruchter, D G. Gilbank, Md Gladders, G Goldhaber, A Goobar, T Hattori, E Hsiao, Xiaosheng Huang, Y Ihara, K Kashikawa, B Koester, K Konishi, M Kowalski, C Lidman, L Lubin, J Meyers, T Morokuma, T Oda, N Panagia, S Perlmutter, M Postman, P Ripoche, P Rosati, D Rubin, Dj Schlegel, Al Spadafora, Sa Stanford, M Strovink, N Suzuki, N Takanashi, K Tokita, N Yasuda Dec 2011

The Hubble Space Telescope * Cluster Supernova Survey. Ii. The Type Ia Supernova Rate In High-Redshift Galaxy Clusters, K Barbary, G Aldering, R Amanullah, M Brodwin, N Connolly, Ks Dawson, M Doi, P Eisenhardt, L Faccioli, V Fadeyev, Hk Fakhouri, As Fruchter, D G. Gilbank, Md Gladders, G Goldhaber, A Goobar, T Hattori, E Hsiao, Xiaosheng Huang, Y Ihara, K Kashikawa, B Koester, K Konishi, M Kowalski, C Lidman, L Lubin, J Meyers, T Morokuma, T Oda, N Panagia, S Perlmutter, M Postman, P Ripoche, P Rosati, D Rubin, Dj Schlegel, Al Spadafora, Sa Stanford, M Strovink, N Suzuki, N Takanashi, K Tokita, N Yasuda

Physics and Astronomy

We report a measurement of the Type Ia supernova (SN Ia) rate in galaxy clusters at 0.9 < z < 1.46 from the Hubble Space Telescope Cluster Supernova Survey. This is the first cluster SN Ia rate measurement with detected z > 0.9 SNe. Finding 8 ± 1 cluster SNe Ia, we determine an SN Ia rate of 0.50+0.23 –0.19 (stat) +0.10 –0.09 (sys) h 2 70 SNuB (SNuB ≡ 10–12 SNe L –1 ☉, B yr–1). In units of stellar mass, this translates to 0.36+0.16 –0.13 (stat) +0.07 –0.06 (sys) h 2 70 SNuM (SNuM ≡ 10–12 SNe M –1 ☉ yr–1). This represents a …


Cross-Correlation Of Cosmological Birefringence With Cmb Temperature, Robert R. Caldwell, Vera Gluscevic, Marc Kamionkowski Apr 2011

Cross-Correlation Of Cosmological Birefringence With Cmb Temperature, Robert R. Caldwell, Vera Gluscevic, Marc Kamionkowski

Dartmouth Scholarship

Theories for new particle and early-Universe physics abound with pseudo-Nambu-Goldstone fields that arise when global symmetries are spontaneously broken. The coupling of these fields to the Chern-Simons term of electromagnetism may give rise to cosmological birefringence (CB), a frequency-independent rotation of the linear polarization of photons as they propagate over cosmological distances. Inhomogeneities in the CB-inducing field may yield a rotation angle that varies across the sky. Here we note that such a spatially-varying birefringence may be correlated with the cosmic microwave background (CMB) temperature. We describe quintessence scenarios where this cross-correlation exists and other scenarios where the scalar field …


Children In God's House: Teaching Cosmology At A Nazarene University, Stephen Case Jan 2011

Children In God's House: Teaching Cosmology At A Nazarene University, Stephen Case

Faculty Scholarship – Geology

This is one of a collection of essays that attempts to articulate the common “center pole” around which Nazarene higher educators stand and the theological and pedagogical commitments that draw them together. It is one of a series of values documents for Nazarene educational institutions and was produced and reviewed by 51 faculty at 16 institutions from six countries. The title of the collection, Telos, comes from the Greek term used in the New Testament to address the perfect end, or destination, for which Christians are designed. This essay sets out how understanding and engaging with contemporary theories regarding the …


The Morphology Of Passively Evolving Galaxies At Z ~ 2 From Hst/Wfc3 Deep Imagin In The Hubble Ultradeep Field, P Cassata, M Giavalisco, Yc Guo, H Ferguson, Am Koekemoer, A Renzini, A Fontana, S Salimbeni, M Dickinson, S Casertano, Cj Conselice, N Grogin, Jm Lotz, C Papovich, Ra Lucas, A Straughn, Jp Gardner, L Moustakas Jan 2010

The Morphology Of Passively Evolving Galaxies At Z ~ 2 From Hst/Wfc3 Deep Imagin In The Hubble Ultradeep Field, P Cassata, M Giavalisco, Yc Guo, H Ferguson, Am Koekemoer, A Renzini, A Fontana, S Salimbeni, M Dickinson, S Casertano, Cj Conselice, N Grogin, Jm Lotz, C Papovich, Ra Lucas, A Straughn, Jp Gardner, L Moustakas

Astronomy Department Faculty Publication Series

We present near–IR images, obtained with the Hubble Space Telescope (HST) and the WFC3/IR camera, of six passive and massive galaxies at redshift 1.3 < z < 2.4 (SSFR< 10−2 Gyr−1; stellar mass M ∼ 1011 M), selected from the Great Observatories Origins Deep Survey (GOODS). These images, which have a spatial resolution of ∼ 1.5 kpc, provide the deepest view of the optical rest–frame morphology of such systems to date. We find that the light profile of these galaxies is regular and well described by a Sérsic model with index typical of today’s spheroids. Their size, however, …


Multiwavelength Analysis Of The Intriguing Grb 061126: The Reverse Shock Scenario And Magnetization, A. Gomboc, S. Kobayashi, C. Guidorzi, A. Melandri, V. Mangano, B. Sbarufatti, C. G. Mundell, P. Schady, R. J. Smith, Adria Updike, D. A. Kann, K. Misra, E. Rol, A. Pozanenko, A. J. Castro-Tirado, G. C. Anupama, D. Bersier, M. F. Bode, D. Carter, P. Curran, A. Fruchter, J. Graham, D. H. Hartmann, M. Ibrahimov, A. Levan, A. Monfardini, C. J. Mottram, P. T. O’Brien, P. Prema, D. K. Sahu, I. A. Steele, N. R. Tanvir, K. Wiersema Jan 2008

Multiwavelength Analysis Of The Intriguing Grb 061126: The Reverse Shock Scenario And Magnetization, A. Gomboc, S. Kobayashi, C. Guidorzi, A. Melandri, V. Mangano, B. Sbarufatti, C. G. Mundell, P. Schady, R. J. Smith, Adria Updike, D. A. Kann, K. Misra, E. Rol, A. Pozanenko, A. J. Castro-Tirado, G. C. Anupama, D. Bersier, M. F. Bode, D. Carter, P. Curran, A. Fruchter, J. Graham, D. H. Hartmann, M. Ibrahimov, A. Levan, A. Monfardini, C. J. Mottram, P. T. O’Brien, P. Prema, D. K. Sahu, I. A. Steele, N. R. Tanvir, K. Wiersema

Arts & Sciences Faculty Publications

No abstract provided.


A Time Delay For The Cluster‐Lensed Quasar Sdss J1004+4112, J. Fohlmeister, C. S. Kochanek, E. E. Falco, J. Wambsganss, N. Morgan, C.W. Morgan, E.O. Ofek, D. Maoz, C.R. Keeton, J.C. Barentine, G. Dalton, J. Dembicky, W. Ketzeback, R. Mcmillan, C.S. Peters Mar 2007

A Time Delay For The Cluster‐Lensed Quasar Sdss J1004+4112, J. Fohlmeister, C. S. Kochanek, E. E. Falco, J. Wambsganss, N. Morgan, C.W. Morgan, E.O. Ofek, D. Maoz, C.R. Keeton, J.C. Barentine, G. Dalton, J. Dembicky, W. Ketzeback, R. Mcmillan, C.S. Peters

Dartmouth Scholarship

We present 426 epochs of optical monitoring data spanning 1000 days from 2003 December to 2006 June for the gravitationally lensed quasar SDSS J1004+4112. The time delay between the A and B images is tBA . 38: 42: 0 days (2 . 4) in the expected sense that B leads A and the overall time ordering is C-B-A-D-E. The measured delay invalidates all published models. The models probably failed because they neglected the perturbations from cluster member galaxies. Models including the galaxies can fit the data well, but conclusions about the clustermass distribution should await themeasurement of the longer, and …


Sudden Gravitational Transition, Robert R. Caldwell, William Komp, Leonard Parker, Daniel A. T. Vanzella Jan 2006

Sudden Gravitational Transition, Robert R. Caldwell, William Komp, Leonard Parker, Daniel A. T. Vanzella

Dartmouth Scholarship

We investigate the properties of a cosmological scenario which undergoes a gravitational phase transition at late times. In this scenario, the Universe evolves according to general relativity in the standard, hot big bang picture until a redshift z≲1. Nonperturbative phenomena associated with a minimally-coupled scalar field catalyzes a transition, whereby an order parameter consisting of curvature quantities such as R2, RabRab, RabcdRabcd acquires a constant expectation value. The ensuing cosmic acceleration appears driven by a dark-energy component with an equation-of-state w<−1. We evaluate the constraints from type 1a supernovae, the cosmic microwave background, and other cosmological observations. We find that a range of models making a sharp transition to cosmic acceleration are consistent with observations.


Dark-Energy Evolution Across The Cosmological-Constant Boundary, Robert R. Caldwell, Michael Doran Aug 2005

Dark-Energy Evolution Across The Cosmological-Constant Boundary, Robert R. Caldwell, Michael Doran

Dartmouth Scholarship

We explore the properties of dark-energy models for which the equation of state, w, defined as the ratio of pressure to energy density, crosses the cosmological-constant boundary w=−1. We adopt an empirical approach, treating the dark energy as an uncoupled fluid or a generalized scalar field. We describe the requirements for a viable model, in terms of the equation of state and sound speed. A generalized scalar field cannot safely traverse w=−1, although a pair of scalars with w>−1 and w<−1 will work. A fluid description with a well-defined sound speed can also cross the boundary. Contrary to expectations, such a crossing model does not instantaneously resemble a cosmological constant at the moment w=−1 since the density and pressure perturbations do not necessarily vanish. But because a dark energy with w<−1 dominates only at very late times, and because the dark energy is not generally prone to gravitational clustering, then crossing the cosmological-constant boundary leaves no distinct imprint.


The Oxford-Dartmouth Thirty Degree Survey - I. Observations And Calibration Of A Wide-Field Multiband Survey, Emily C. Macdonald, Paul Allen, Gavin Dalton, Leonidas A. Moustakas, Catherine Heymans, Edward Edmondso N, Chris Blake, Lee Clewley, Molly C. Hammell, Ed Olding, Lance Miller, Steve Rawlings, Jasper Wall, Gary Wegner, Christian Wolf Aug 2004

The Oxford-Dartmouth Thirty Degree Survey - I. Observations And Calibration Of A Wide-Field Multiband Survey, Emily C. Macdonald, Paul Allen, Gavin Dalton, Leonidas A. Moustakas, Catherine Heymans, Edward Edmondso N, Chris Blake, Lee Clewley, Molly C. Hammell, Ed Olding, Lance Miller, Steve Rawlings, Jasper Wall, Gary Wegner, Christian Wolf

Dartmouth Scholarship

The Oxford–Dartmouth Thirty Degree Survey (ODTS) is a deep, wide, multiband imaging survey designed to cover a total of 30 deg2 in BV RiZ, with a subset of U- and K-band data, in four separate fields of 5–10 deg2 centred at 00:18:24 +34:52, 09:09:45 +40:50, 13:40:00 +02:30 and 16:39:30 +45:24. Observations have been made using the Wide Field Camera on the 2.5-m Isaac Newton Telescope (INT) in La Palma to average limiting depths (5σ Vega, aperture magnitudes) of U= 24.8, B= 25.6, V= 25.0, R= 24.6 and i′= …


Riemann Tensor Of The Ambient Universe, The Dilaton, And Newton’S Constant, Rossen Ivanov, Emil Prodanov Jan 2004

Riemann Tensor Of The Ambient Universe, The Dilaton, And Newton’S Constant, Rossen Ivanov, Emil Prodanov

Articles

We investigate a four-dimensional world, embedded into a five-dimensional spacetime, and find the five-dimensional Riemann tensor via generalisation of the Gauss (--Codacci) equations. We then derive the generalised equations of the four-dimensional world and also show that the square of the dilaton field is equal to the Newton's constant. We find plausable constant and non-constant solutions for the dilaton. Comment: 5 pages, revtex


Phantom Energy: Dark Energy With W < − 1 Causes A Cosmic Doomsday, Robert R. Caldwell, Marc Kamionkowski, Nevin N. Weinberg Aug 2003

Phantom Energy: Dark Energy With W < − 1 Causes A Cosmic Doomsday, Robert R. Caldwell, Marc Kamionkowski, Nevin N. Weinberg

Dartmouth Scholarship

We explore the consequences that follow if the dark energy is phantom energy, in which the sum of the pressure and energy density is negative. The positive phantom-energy density becomes infinite in finite time, overcoming all other forms of matter, such that the gravitational repulsion rapidly brings our brief epoch of cosmic structure to a close. The phantom energy rips apart the Milky Way, solar system, Earth, and ultimately the molecules, atoms, nuclei, and nucleons of which we are composed, before the death of the Universe in a “big rip.”


Observational Constraints On General Relativistic Energy Conditions, Cosmic Matter Density And Dark Energy From X-Ray Clusters Of Galaxies And Type-La Supernovae, P. Schuecker, R. R. Caldwell, H. Böhringer, C. A. Collins Feb 2003

Observational Constraints On General Relativistic Energy Conditions, Cosmic Matter Density And Dark Energy From X-Ray Clusters Of Galaxies And Type-La Supernovae, P. Schuecker, R. R. Caldwell, H. Böhringer, C. A. Collins

Dartmouth Scholarship

New observational constraints on the cosmic matter density Ωm and an effectively redshift-independent equation

of state parameter wx of the dark energy are obtained while simultaneously testing the strong and null energy conditions of

general relativity on macroscopic scales. The combination of REFLEX X-ray cluster and type-Ia supernova data shows that

for a flat Universe the strong energy condition might presently be violated whereas the null energy condition seems to be

fulfilled. This provides another observational argument for the present accelerated cosmic expansion and the absence of exotic

physical phenomena related to a broken null energy condition. The marginalization of …


The Afterglow And Complex Environment Of The Optically Dim Burst Grb 980613, Jens Hjorth, Bjarne Thomsen, Svend R. Nielsen, Michael I. Andersen, Stephen T. Holland, Johan U. Fynbo, Holger Pederson, Andreas O. Jaunsen, Jules P. Halpern, Robert Fesen, Javier Gorosabel, Alberto Castro-Tirado, Richard G. Mcmahon, Michael D. Hoenig, Gunnlaugur Bjornsson, Lorenzo Amati, Nial R. Tanvir, Priyamvada Natarajan Jan 2002

The Afterglow And Complex Environment Of The Optically Dim Burst Grb 980613, Jens Hjorth, Bjarne Thomsen, Svend R. Nielsen, Michael I. Andersen, Stephen T. Holland, Johan U. Fynbo, Holger Pederson, Andreas O. Jaunsen, Jules P. Halpern, Robert Fesen, Javier Gorosabel, Alberto Castro-Tirado, Richard G. Mcmahon, Michael D. Hoenig, Gunnlaugur Bjornsson, Lorenzo Amati, Nial R. Tanvir, Priyamvada Natarajan

Dartmouth Scholarship

We report the identification of the optical afterglow of GRB 980613 in R- and I-band images obtained between 16 and 48 hr after the gamma-ray burst. Early near-infrared (NIR) H and K' observations are also reported. The afterglow was optically faint (R ≈ 23) at discovery but did not exhibit an unusually rapid decay (power-law decay slope α < 1.8 at 2 σ). The optical/NIR spectral index (βRH < 1.1) was consistent with the optical-to-X-ray spectral index (βRX ≈ 0.6), indicating a maximal reddening of the afterglow of ≈0.45 mag in R. Hence, the dimness of the optical afterglow was mainly due to the fairly flat spectral shape rather than internal reddening …