Title: Cosmology from the Cosmic Microwave Background
1Cosmology from the Cosmic Microwave Background
2About Me..
3About Me..
- Postdoc in the Astrophysics group at Bristol
working with Professor Mark Birkinshaw, world
expert in our field - Various projects, OCRA, AMiBA
- Previously PhD in Cambridge, working on the VSA
- MSci in Bristol (many moons ago!)
4Talk Structure
- Some key concepts in astrophysics, and what we
spend our time doing! - The point of all this what are we trying to
achieve in the field of Cosmology? - The Cosmic Microwave Background (relic radiation
from the Big Bang) - Galaxy clusters and the Sunyaev Zeldovich effect
5Before we go any further.some things you need
to know.
6STAR / PLANET
7GALAXY
You are here!
8GALAXY CLUSTER
THESE OBJECTS ARE THE FOCUS OF MY CURRENT WORK
9The Cosmic Web
10Photon a PARTICLE of light. Remember this,
or please ask if you forget!
11- Astrophysics That branch of astronomy which
treats of the physical or chemical properties of
the celestial bodies. Hence astrophysicist, a
student of astronomical physics.
12Topics in Astrophysics..
- Solar System planets, the sun
- Stars stellar composition, stellar evolution,
star formation, supernovae, extra-solar planets - Galaxies structure, properties, stellar
velocities (dark matter), formation, evolution,
clustering - Active galaxies mechanisms, power sources (black
holes) - High-energy phenomena Gamma ray bursts
- Galaxy clusters galaxy properties, gas
properties, lensing (dark matter), super
clustering. - Large scale structure, structure formation
theories - Cosmology properties of the Universe as a
whole, formation (the Big Bang), fate??
13- Cosmology The science or theory of the
Universe as an ordered whole, and of the general
laws which govern it. Also, a particular account
or system of the universe and its laws.
14What do you astronomers actually DO?
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16- Obtain data
- Go to telescope
- Download from archive
- Process data
- Work out what it tells us!
- Publish in journal
17In practice, need 2 approaches
- OBSERVATIONAL
- Observe celestial bodies (stars, galaxies etc) at
various wavelengths - Fit theoretical models to data to choose the most
appropriate
- THEORETICAL
- Simulate celestial bodies (stellar evolution,
galaxy formation etc) - Create models of possible physical processes
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19My Work
- COSMOLOGY from
- The Cosmic Microwave Background Radiation (CMB)
- The interaction of the CMB with Galaxy Clusters
via the Sunyaev Zeldovich Effect - OBSERVATIONAL - ie obtaining data, data
processing, extracting science - Tenerife, Poland, Hawaii, Taiwan..
Very hot topics in Astrophysics at the moment!
20Onto the specifics What are we trying to
achieve in Cosmology today?
21Hubble 1929 The Universe is expanding
22Zwicky 1933 Galaxy clusters contain Dark Matter
231998 Supernovae suggest Universe is accelerating
24Big questions in cosmology
- Will the Universe expand forever?
- Depends on the mean density
- We can constrain this using the CMB
- What is the Universe made from?
- Normal stuff plus Dark Matter
- What is Dark Matter? Particle physicists working
on it! - Why does it appear to be accelerating?
- It is being pushed by Dark Energy
- We can constrain this using the CMB
25But what on earth is it??
The Cosmic Microwave Background is central to our
cosmological understanding
26Penzias and Wilson, 1965
- Observing the galaxy, detected annoying level of
static in all directions - Pigeon poo? Aliens??
- No!
- At the same time, Dicke at Princeton predicted
the existence of relic radiation from the big
bang, ie the CMB - Nobel Prize, 1978
27The sky is BRIGHT at radio frequencies.If we
observe the sky with a radio telescope, inbetween
the stars and galaxies, it is NOT DARK.
Visualising the CMB..
28But where does it come from? It all started
with
The Big Bang
29IN THE BEGINNING.
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31COSMIC SOUP
32COSMIC SOUP
PROTON
NEUTRON
ELECTRON
33The Big Bang
- Not really an explosion
- Universe expanded rapidly as a whole and is still
expanding today as a result of the Big Bang
(Hubble) - Matter was created in the form of tiny particles
(protons, neutrons, electrons) - Too hot for normal stuff to form (eg atoms,
molecules) - Photons scatter off charged particles like a
fog (Thomson scattering)
34300,000 years later
- Universe much cooler, atoms start to form..
- Hydrogen, Helium, normal stuff
35Much cooled, atoms form, photons released
36Universe now neutral, Photons escape
These photons, viewed today, form the Cosmic
Microwave Background Radiation
37Summary Formation of the CMB
- The Universe started with the Big Bang
- It was initially hot, dense and ionised
- Photons were continually scattered from charged
particles until. - .temperature decreased and atoms formed (neutral
particles) - Photons (light) escaped and became able to
stream freely through the Universe. - Observe the same photons today, much cooled, as
the Cosmic Microwave Background
38An important aside formation of structures
At the same time as all this was going on,
structures were starting to form out of the
cosmic soup
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40GRAVITY!
41Back to the CMB..
42The CMB today
- Can observe the CMB today, 13.7 billion years
after the Big Bang - Radiation is much cooled 2.73 K (-270.42C)
- Conclusive evidence for the Big Bang theory -
proves Universe was once in thermal equilibrium - So..... what does it look like?
43- Observe blank sky with a radio telescope.
- Rather than darkness, see Uniform, high-energy
glow - Turn up the resolution......
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45- Tiny temperature differences (microK)
- When the CMB photons escaped, structures were
starting to form - These structures have now become galaxies
- The structure formation processes have affected
the CMB and we see the imprint as hot and
cold spots - Very difficult to measure!
46What does the CMB tell us?
- Measure the strength of the temperature
differences on different scales, eg COBE 1992
47A plethora of other experiments followed this
up.until.
48What does the CMB tell us?
- Measure the strength of the temperature
differences on different scales, eg WMAP 2003
49What does the CMB tell us?
- In practice, we need information from a wide
range of resolutions, or scales - Measure the strength of the temperature
differences on different scales - Low resolution (eg COBE)
- Higher resolution (eg WMAP)
- Theorists come up with a model (function, like
ymx c but more complex!) including all of the
physics of CMB/structure formation - Observers fit the model to real observations of
the CMB (like drawing a line of best fit),
tweaking the values of each parameter
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51What does this tell us?
- The function on the previous slide is complex and
involves many terms including - Density of Universe in ORDINARY MATTER
- Density of Universe in DARK MATTER
- Density of Universe in DARK ENERGY
- (The sum is the total density, and governs the
fate of the Universe as discussed earlier). - We can constrain some of the big questions in
cosmology by observing the CMB
52Current best model
- The Universe appears to be flat (critical)
- Will just expand forever
- But measurements suggest that only 30 of this
density can come from matter - Contributions from ordinary and dark matter
- This points towards the existence of something
else which we call Dark Energy - Dark energy is believed to be pushing the
Universe outwards, i.e. accelerating the
expansion
53What next for CMB research?
- New satellite, Planck, launch date 2008?
- Set to solve all the mysteries..allegedly!
- This, and some ground based experiments are
trying to measure CMB polarisation (difficult!) - Another route look for secondary features in
the CMB (ie those that have occurred since the
Big Bang)
54Before we move onQuick CMB revision.
- The CMB is light originating from the Big
BangWe can see it coming from all
directionsThe sky glows at radio frequencies
55More recent imprints on the CMB
- Lets forget the tiny temperature fluctuations
for now! - Majority of CMB photons have travelled through
the Universe unimpeded - But some have interacted with ionised material on
the way - Main contributor Galaxy clusters
56- Rich Clusters - congregations of hundreds or even
thousands of galaxies - See cluster galaxies and lensing arcs in the
optical - But only around 5 of a clusters mass is in
galaxies (Most of the mass is in Dark Matter) - But a sizeable fraction is found in hot gas......
57- X-rays - see hot gas
- via Bremstrahlung
- 10-30 of total mass
- Chandra Image of the Coma cluster
58Cluster Gas
- Gas stripped from galaxies and sucked in from
outside - Trapped in huge gravitational potential
- Hot, dense and energetic
- Ionised (charged) - may interact with incident
radiation (such as the CMB) - Accurately represents the characteristics of the
whole Universe - Clusters are Cosmic Laboratories
59Sunyaev and Zeldovich, 1969
- Postulated that the CMB could interact with the
gas in galaxy clusters - The Sunyaev Zeldovich (SZ) Effect
60What is it, exactly?
- Low energy CMB photon collides with high energy
cluster electron - Photon receives energy boost
- Net effect shift CMB to higher frequencies in
the direction of a cluster
61What is it, simply?
- Cluster makes partial shadow in the CMB
62What is so interesting?
- Its INDEPENDENT of the DISTANCE of the cluster
responsible - The strength of the shadow tells us about the
characteristics of the CLUSTER GAS - Mirrors UNIVERSAL CHARACTERISTICS
63What does it look like?
VSA image (from earlier!)
64Exciting new Science!
- In most branches of Astronomy, it is difficult to
observe very distant objects - The SZ effect is distance-independent, so in
theory we can observe ALL clusters in existence - Current hot topic surveying the sky using radio
telescopes to find new clusters via the SZ effect
65To study Cosmology via clusters, we need lots of
themA large, sensible sample of objects is
usually called a catalogue
66SZ Cluster surveys
- Cluster catalogues to date have been derived from
X-ray observations - Severe limitations since the X-ray signal falls
off quickly with increasing distance - SZ surveys will enable us to generate catalogues
of ALL clusters in existence (with a few
caveats!) - Cluster evolution
- Study how cluster properties change as a function
of distance (and hence cluster age) - Evolution of the Universe
- Study how the number of clusters per unit volume
changes with distance cosmology
67My Work
- I previously worked with the Very Small Array,
looking at both the CMB and the SZ effect - I am now involved with two new SZ experiments,
OCRA and AMiBA - We are
- Studying known clusters
- Performing surveys to find new ones
68OCRA
- Prototype detector on Torun telescope, Poland
- 32m dish
- Various receivers, ours works at 30GHz
- Suffers from atmospheric contamination
- Most useful observations are made in the winter
69OCRA
- We recently published results from 4 well-known
clusters - Now observing larger sample, should be able to
derive more science from this - Future array receiver, blind surveys
- Excellent imaging instrument
70AMiBA
- Taiwanese project, based in Hawaii
- 90 GHz Interferometer
- Hexapod mount
- Testing observations with 7 60cm dishes
- High significance detections of well-know
clusters, will be published soon!
71AMiBA
- Ultimately 19 dishes, 1.2m diameter?
- Potential problems with the platform flexing
- Also problems with ground emission
- Very powerful survey instrument
- Also polarisation in the CMB
72Challenges.
- The SZ effect is TINY
- Galaxy clusters contain galaxies (!), which may
emit radio waves and drown the SZ signal - Require further information, or observations at
multiple frequencies. - Radio galaxies are less bright at higher
frequencies, but higher frequency observations
suffer from atmospheric contamination - Remember the fluctuations in the CMB itself?
They can also contaminate! - Go to higher resolution
Can overcome most problems but its not easy!
73Summary
- The Big Bang left behind radiation which we can
observe at radio frequencies today - The Cosmic Microwave Background
- The CMB has imprints upon it caused by the
formation of the structures we see today (eg
galaxies) - The CMB tells us much about the Universe as a
whole - Galaxy clusters may create shadows in the CMB
- The Sunyaev Zeldovich Effect
- The SZ effect is distance-independent so very
useful for cluster physics and also Cosmology
74 ANY QUESTIONS?