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Constraining Cosmology in the Planck Era

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Title: Constraining Cosmology in the Planck Era


1
Constraining Cosmologyin the Planck Era
  • Martin White
  • University of California, Berkeley

2
Outline
  • A decade of discovery 1992-2002
  • How far weve come
  • The near future
  • The Planck Epoch
  • Primary CMB anisotropies
  • Testing inflation within the decade
  • The universe at z1000
  • Dark energy
  • Secondary CMB anisotropies
  • A CMB centric view of structure formation

3
1992(2)-2002(1)
White, Scott Silk (1994)
WMAP 1st year data ext
4
The Planck Epoch
Planck has the resolution, sensitivity and
frequency coverage to provide precise
measurements of the CMB power spectra.
(1yr)
Temperature
Polarization
5
Precise measurements precise theory science
  • What kinds of science questions are enabled by
    such precise measurements?
  • Primary CMB anisotropies
  • Testing inflation within the decade
  • The universe at z1000
  • Dark energy
  • Secondary CMB anisotropies
  • A CMB centric view of structure formation

6
A prediction of inflation?
  • Inflation predicts an almost scale-invariant
    spectrum of (adiabatic) density perturbations
    were produced in the early universe.
  • Deviations from scale-invariance tell us about
    the inflaton potential.
  • Deviations from a power-law spectrum tell us we
    dont understand inflation as well as we thought!
  • The what else could it be theory also predicts
    a scale-invariant spectrum of perturbations.
  • Observationally detecting a deviation from
    scale-invariance would be (yet another?) triumph
    for inflation theory.
  • A long lever arm and both temperature and
    polarization power spectrum make Planck a
    wonderful experiment for testing inflation!

7
Testing inflation with the CMB
  • Measure ns and running
  • Expect dns0.04(0.02) 0.007 and da0.02
    0.003
  • c.f. WMAP longer level arm, more spectra
  • Also break (accidental n-t) degeneracy with EE

8
Testing inflation with the CMB
  • Rule out ? isocurvature contribution
  • Constrain features in the primordial P(k)
  • Trans-Planckian effects,
  • Find large-angle GW signal ?
  • Would measure the expansion rate during
    inflation.
  • Constrain tensors down to a few percent of the
    scalar contribution.
  • Testing Gaussianity
  • Increased S/N dramatically tightens constraints
    on non-Gaussianity in the CMB (-58 lt fNLlt134 at
    95CL) to fNL1.

9
The universe at z1000 cosmological parameters
  • Detailed observations of the CMB anisotropy
    constrain the high redshift universe.
  • Most strongly constrained is the physics which
    gives rise to the acoustic peaks in the CMB power
    spectrum.
  • CMB gives wm, wb, qA or lA.
  • From this can derive other constraints, e.g.
    D(z1100)
  • Currently dD(z1100) 3
  • Limited by uncertainty in wm (dwm 8)
  • Key is higher peaks.
  • Planck should get dwm0.9.
  • An important constraint for dark energy and to
    calibrate the baryon oscillation method for
    measuring DA(z) H(z)
  • In principle dD(z1100) 0.2!

10
The cartoon
  • At early times the universe was hot, dense and
    ionized. Photons and matter were tightly coupled
    by Thomson scattering.
  • Short m.f.p. allows fluid approximation
    baryon-photon fluid
  • Initial fluctuations in density and gravitational
    potential drive acoustic waves in the fluid
    compressions and rarefactions.
  • A sudden recombination decouples the radiation
    and matter, giving us a snapshot of the fluid at
    last scattering.

harmonic wave
11
Acoustic oscillations seen!
First compression, at kcstlsp. Density maxm,
velocity null.
Velocity maximum
First rarefaction peak at kcstls2p
Acoustic scale is set by the sound horizon at
last scattering s cstls
12
Sound horizon more carefully
  • In an expanding universe, and with the relative
    densities of photons and baryons evolving, the
    expression for the sound horizon is not longer
    simply scstls
  • Depends on expansion of universe
  • Matter and radiation density H2 8pG (rm rr
    )
  • and the baryon-to-photon ratio (through cs)

Photon density is known exquisitely well from CMB
spectrum.
13
CMB calibration
  • Not coincidentally the sound horizon is extremely
    well determined by the structure of the acoustic
    peaks in the CMB.
  • Knowledge of the physical scale, s, and the
    angular scale of the peaks, qA, gives the
    distance to last scattering D through sD qA.
  • The same physical scale is imprinted upon the
    matter power spectrum, and can serve as a
    calibrated standard ruler at low-z. (D.
    Eisenstein)

14
Matter power spectrum P(k)
Wb wm
wm
Total matter power spectrum
Eisenstein (2002)
15
A calibrated standard ruler
Both the large-scale peak in the matter power
spectrum and the fine-scale wiggles are well
calibrated by the CMB.
Meiksin, White Peacock
16
The missing piece is the matter density
The key is the higher peaks
  • The CMB anisotropies are damped at small angular
    scales by photon diffusion. Well understood!
  • Removing this shows the effects of baryons and
    the epoch of equality.

Hu White (1997)
17
Baryon loading and the potential envelope
  • Baryons give weight to the photon-baryon fluid.
    This makes it easier to fall into a potential
    well and harder to bounce to become a
    rarefaction.
  • Baryon loading enhances the compressions and
    weakens the rarefactions, leading to an
    alternating height of the peaks.
  • At earlier times the baryon-photon fluid
    contributes more to the total density of the
    universe than the CDM. The effects of
    baryon-photon self-gravity enhance the
    fluctuations on small scales.
  • Since the fluid has pressure, it is hard to
    compress.
  • Infall into potentials is slower than free-fall.
  • Because the (over-)density cannot grow fast
    enough, the potential is forced to decay by the
    expansion of the universe.
  • The photons are then left in a compressed state
    with no need to fight against the potential as
    they leave -- enhancing small-scale power.

Measuring the higher peaks constrains the matter
density!
18
The high-z universe
  • Planck will dramatically improve our knowledge of
    the physical conditions of the universe at
    z1000.
  • The physical matter and baryon densities (in
    g/cm3), the acoustic scale and the distance to
    last scattering will be determined to sub-percent
    accuracy.
  • Equality is also tightly constrained
  • Know wg from Tcmb
  • Know wr if standard neutrinos are only other
    species and having wm from the peaks gives zeq
  • Extra species, or decaying components, are also
    tightly constrained by the behavior of the
    potentials during radiation domination.
    (Eisenstein White)

19
Secondary science
  • Planck enables numerous secondary science
    applications through its combination of high S/N
    and excellent frequency coverage.
  • Thermal Sunyaev-Zeldovich effect
  • Clusters of galaxies or first stars?
  • Lensing of the CMB
  • Probe of growth, features in P(k) and/or mn.
  • ISW as a probe of low-z physics
  • Dark energy fluctuations?

20
The Thermal SZ effect
High signal to noise and angular resolution are
essential to studying higher order effects and
cross-correlating CMB maps with observations at
other wavelengths.
Input SZ simulation
WMAP 4yr
Planck 1yr
21
The Planck SZ catalog
  • Planck is not an ideal instrument for finding
    clusters using their SZ effect.
  • For all but the most massive clusters
  • Beam is too large
  • Sensitivity is not high enough
  • However Planck is an all-sky survey, and the SZ
    surface brightness is independent of redshift.
  • A cluster that is large enough can be seen
    anywhere within the observable universe.
  • Planck will find thousands of the most massive
    clusters.
  • The most massive clusters are the rarest, but
    also some of the most interesting objects in
    cosmology.
  • The Planck cluster catalog will be the best
    resource for studying the extreme limit of
    structure formation!

22
An all-sky catalog of rich clusters
A simulation of the Planck cluster catalog, using
a simple peak finding method. This plot shows
clusters with Mgt8x1014 M0/h. Many lower mass
clusters are also found.
2 of sky simulated!
23
The CMB prior
  • With WMAP, and certainly after Planck, we will
    have very precise knowledge of the universe at
    z1000.
  • We will have tightly constrained the physical
    densities of matter and baryons, the amplitude of
    the fluctuations in the linear phase over 3
    decades in length scale and the shape of the
    primordial power spectrum.
  • Our knowledge of physical conditions and
    large-scale structure at z1000 will be better
    than our knowledge of such quantities at z0!
  • One should not ignore this dramatic advance in
    our knowledge.
  • Hold the high-z universe fixed
  • Impose strong CMB priors on future
    measurements.

24
Large-scale structure at z3
  • Knowing equality and the baryon fraction enables
    us to predict the shape of the linear theory
    (matter) power spectrum extremely accurately in
    Mpc
  • Note, not h-1 Mpc as would quote for local
    measures.
  • Knowing wm and zeq fixes H(z) at high-z
  • The amplitude of the fluctuations is well
    constrained by anisotropy measurements, up to the
    degeneracy with t.
  • Conserved quantity is (roughly) dm e-t
  • Unless dark energy is important at zgtgt1, we can
    evolve our fluctuations reliably from z1000 to
    z3 dma.

25
The real-space z3 power spectrum
This enables us to constrain the high-z matter
power spectrum (with lengths measured in
meters!) Example using the WMAP 1yr data
constrains D2(k) to 7 near k0.01 up to the t
degeneracy.
26
Making it to z0
  • The uncertainty in structure formation thus comes
    from the extrapolation to z0 and to redshift
    space.
  • Growth of fluctuations between z3 and z0
    depends on dark energy or massive neutrinos
    (vertical shifts).
  • Conversion from physical distances (in Mpc) to
    local intervals (in h-1 Mpc) brings in a
    dependence on h or Wm (horizontal shifts).

27
Conclusions
  • Planck will provide a dramatic advance in our
    knowledge of primary and secondary CMB
    anisotropies.
  • Testing inflation.
  • Constraining the universe at z1000
  • Dark energy
  • An all sky-catalog of massive clusters of
    galaxies.
  • The CMB centric view of structure formation.

28
The End
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