Transcript Slide 1

Dark matter and dark energy
Gavin Lawes
Wayne State University
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May 22nd, 2007
Outline
•Physics on cosmic length scales: special and general relativity
•Astrophysical measurements
Measuring distance
Measuring velocity
•History of the universe (on a single viewgraph)
•Open problems in cosmology
Dark matter
Dark energy
Large scale structure of the universe
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Special relativity
c=300,000 km/sec is a hard speed limit for the universe.
The time interval or space interval between events depends on the
speed of the observer.
Causality
Time
B
Space
A
Slope=c •The interval between A and B is timelike;
everyone agrees that A occurs before B (so A
could cause B).
C
•The interval between A and C is spacelike;
some people think A happened first and some
people think C happened first (so A cannot have
caused C).
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General Relativity
Rab  Rgab  gab  8Tab
1
2
•This equation describes how space is distorted by mass and energy.
•  is called the cosmological constant. Einstein put this in to force
a static universe.
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Cosmological Distance Units
Astronomical unit (AU): Earth-Sun distance (way too small to be
useful).
Lightyear (ly): Distance light travels in a year (still too small).
Parsec (ps): 3.26 lightyears (ditto).
Megaparsec (Mpc): One million parsecs (this is about right for
talking about distant galaxies).
Our galaxy (Milky Way) is about 100,000 ly in diameter, the Andromeda galaxy
is about 1 Mpc away, and the “edge” of the universe is ~10,000 Mpc away.
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How do we measure distance?
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•Parallax can be used to find the distance to close objects (~300 ly).
•Astronomers often measure cosmic distance using apparent luminosity
measurements on Cepheid variables and Type 1a supernovae.
Cepheid variable
“Pulsing” star
works to ~20 MPC
Type 1a supernova
“Exploding” star
works to >1000 MPC
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Cepheid Variables
•Period of variable luminosity (brightness) is related to actual
brightness of star (Henrietta Leavitt, 1908).
•Problems: This estimate is affected by space dust, and these stars are
not bright enough to see huge distances.
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Type 1a supernova
These supernovae are believed to follow a standard intensity vs time
curve (after taking into account well-known “fudge factors”).
Problems: There are not too many Type 1a supernovae known.
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Supernovae seen by SDSS
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How do we measure velocity?
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•Elements in distant stars emit light at very specific wavelengths
(spectrum).
•The wavelength of light we measure on Earth (lmeasured) will be
different than the wavelength emitted by the star (lstar) is the star is
moving relative to the Earth (just like a Doppler shift).
•This shift in wavelength is parameterized by “z” defined by:
l
1  z  measured
lstar
If z<<1 then z=v/c
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Hubble’s Law
v  H 0d
H0=70 km s-1/Mpc
Age of the universe is 1/H0, or
about 13 billion years.
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NB: Using Hubble’s law, astronomers will often use “z” when
talking about velocities, distances, or time after the start of the
universe.
Hubble’s law tells us that the universe is expanding.
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NB: Using Hubble’s law, astronomers will often use “z” when
talking about velocities, distances, or time after the start of the
universe.
Hubble’s law tells us that the universe is expanding.
...
...
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NB: Using Hubble’s law, astronomers will often use “z” when
talking about velocities, distances, or time after the start of the
universe.
Hubble’s law tells us that the universe is expanding.
...
...
...but what is it expanding from? What is it expanding into?
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How did the universe start?
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Big Bang
•15 billion years ago, the universe was very small, very hot ball of
matter and energy.
•In the intervening time, the universe has expanded, but this original
energy can be seen in the cosmic microwave background.
In 1963 isotropic background radio
waves were measured. These could
be fit to 2.7 degree background
radiation, and proved strong evidence
for the Big Bang theory.
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History of the Universe
(Inflation)
Matter/antimatter
annihilate (0.001 sec)
Protons/neutrons form
(3 minutes)
?
2.7 K
Today
(15 billion years)
3000 K
First galaxies form
(1 billion years)
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Neutral atoms form
(380,000 years)
Just one more thing....
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Why was there more matter than antimatter?
•The early universe should have had equal amounts of matter and
antimatter, which would then annihilate completely.
•This didn’t happen.
•About 1 out of every 1 billion matter particles survived to the
universe today.
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Why do galaxies show flat rotation curves?
GM
(
r
)
v 
2
r
2
•Most of the light from galaxies comes
from the center.
•The flat rotation curves suggest that
there is a uniform mass distribution.
Galactic rotation curve
(measures the rotation velocity
as a function of distance from
the center of the galaxy)
•This led to the suggestion of missing
mass, later called “dark matter”,
because it provides gravitational
attraction, but doesn’t emit light.
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This dark matter is believed to surround most galaxies, and the massto-light ratio for certain galaxies can exceed 300 times that of the sun.
(What is dark matter?)
•Doesn’t really exist―the theory of gravity doesn’t work on very,
very large length scales.
•Black holes, neutron stars, brown dwarfs (collectively MACHOS).
•Neutrinos.
•Weakly interacting massive particles (WIMPS).
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Will the universe keep expanding forever?
Einstein put an extra term (called the cosmological constant) in his
equations for General Relativity to produce a static universe.
Universe expands forever
“Flat” universe
Universe collapses
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Accelerating Universe
The intensity of the most distant
objects (largest z) is smaller than
we expect using Hubble’s Law,
so they must be moving away
faster.
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Why is the universe accelerating?
•Einstein’s theory of general relativity is wrong (or incomplete) and
gravity works differently at long length scales.
•The speed of light has changed since the Big Bang.
•A cosmological constant (first proposed by Einstein) that provides a
negative pressure causing the universe to accelerate.
•Quintessence: like the cosmological constant, but not uniform in
space and time.
The last two are forms of dark energy, which would need to have an
energy density of 10-29 g/cm3 (NB: E=mc2)
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Why did galaxies and clusters form?
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Small density variations right after the Big Bang could coalesce into
galaxies, clusters, and superclusters.
Pillars of creation
~4 ly long dustclouds
Great Wall
~500 Mly long cluster of galaxies
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Cosmic microwave background
The cosmic microwave background shows temperature
differences of about 1 part in 100,000 over the universe.
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This plot allows astronomers to analyze the microwave background,
and gives information about the geometry (flat, open, closed) and
matter and energy density of the universe.
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What is the universe made of?
Atoms: Normal matter. We can see
this.
Dark Matter: Invisible mass
inferred by measuring speed of
galaxy rotations.
Dark Energy: Provides negative
pressure for accelerating universe.
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Further research directions in cosmology
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May be possible to observe dark matter using gravitational lensing.
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Intersection of particle physics and cosmology
•There was a lot of energy present during the Big Bang.
•Looking at the very distant parts of the universe allows astronomers
to take a snapshot very early universe to understand how matter and
energy interact at these high energies.
•Some specific theories also predict particles that can provide the
dark matter and dark energy seen in the universe.
•The Large Hadron Collider (LHC) set to start this year will allow
physicists to investigate matter and antimatter at high energies,
similar to .
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end
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