Title: By Gary Litt
1EFFORTS TO MEASURE OUR EXPANDING UNIVERSE
- By Gary Litt
- Astronomy 007
2Origins Einstein Static Universe
- According to general relativity, matter energy
gravitate. Consequently, one would deduce that
they would cause the universe to collapse upon
itself, and this seemed physically unacceptable. - Einsteins Solution Introduction of cosmological
constant Additional term in equations of
general relativity, which physically represents
the possibility that there is a density and
pressure associated with "empty" space. Suggests
pervasive existence of mysterious dark energy. - Einsteins Intention Balance the attractive
force of gravity with pressure that tends to make
the universe as a whole expand. - Einstein proposed this to uphold the paradigm
that the universe was indeed static (Newton).
3Repudiations of Static Universe
- Olberss Paradox The night sky is actually
dark. If the universe was static, infinitely old
filled uniformly with stars, the night sky
should be ablaze with light. - Edwin Hubble ? Einsteins greatest blunder
Just 10 years after Einstein promulgated his
relativity theories, Hubble observed that
galaxies are receding from one another, thereby
indicating that the universe is NOT static is
expanding. - Discovery of quasars Starlike objects with very
large redshifts (distant past), which imply that
the constitution of the universe was very
different from what it is today. - Cosmic Microwave Background
- Combined with other cosmological studies, reports
of CMB studies, BOOMERANG MAXIMA, reported
earlier this year strongly suggest that the
universe is geometrically flat 2/3 of its
density is due to unknown energy.
4Evolution of Universe
- Key Question Hubble proved the universe is
expanding, but is this expansion occurring _at_ an
increasing, constant, or decreasing rate? - Cosmological Parameters
- Density Parameter (OT ?x / ?c)
- Critical Density Amount necessary to make
space flat. - Deceleration Parameter (qo) ? Rate _at_ which
universe is slowing down (qolt0) or speeding up
(qogt0) - Universe underwent rapid expansion immediately
following the BB Inflationary Period. - Inflation acted to smooth out the universe,
making it geometrically flat. OT 1
(approximately). - Standard Models OT 1 (Flat)
- OT Om O?
- Old Om 1 O? 0
- New Om 0.2-0.4 O? 0.6-0.8
- Shapes of the universe indicate matter energy
content - OT lt 1 Open ? Hyperbolic
- OT 1 Flat
- OT gt 1 Closed ? Spherical
- None of these universes has an edge or center.
Cosmic Geometry-Curvature 2D Representations of
Universe Shape
OT Combined average mass density of all forms
of matter energy
5What Dominates the Universe?
- Astronomers have only pinpointed 30-35 of the
matter needed to validate the assumption of a
flat universe. Cosmological constant (Vacuum
Energy Density) accounts for the remaining
matter. - CC behaves gravitationally, like matter energy,
except that it has a negative pressure. It
creates a repulsive gravitational force, which
acts to expand the universe. - As the universe became more spread out, its
density decreased its self-gravity weakened to
the point that repulsive dark energy could take
over and begin to accelerate the universes
expansion. This balance tipped about 5 billion
years ago. - Radiation Dominated Universe ?rad gt ?m gt ??
- Matter Dominated Universe ?m gt ?rad gt ??
- Dark Energy Dominated Universe ?? gt ?m gt ?rad
- Return of ? ? Age Problem A universe with a lot
of ? is older than we might otherwise think. - Resurgence in 1980s
- Existence reconsidered for accelerating universe
explanation in 1990s
Matter Budget of the Universe
6Supernova 1997ff
Universe has expanded at different rates at
different times in the past.
- SN1997ff comes from a time when gravity was still
stronger than the repulsive force the universe
was still decelerating ? Matter v. dark-energy
dominated
- Nondescript 26th magnitude (apparent brightness
measure) galaxy played a key role in cosmologys
new dark energy developments, hosting the most
distant Type IA Supernovae (SN1997ff) observed
thus far.
7Measuring Cosmology with Supernovae
Type II Supernova
- Forces of electron degeneracy lose battle with
gravity and material is ignited producing
nuclear blast ? SN - SN have emerged as powerful tools for measuring
extragalactic distances. - Type IA Empirical tools whose precision
intrinsic brightness make them sensitive probes
of cosmic expansion. - Because they always explode _at_ minimum of 1.4
solar masses, they all generally have the same
qualities, namely how brightly they shine. - Type IA explosions are typically 10-100 times
brighter than a Type II Supernova. - Powerful evidence for accelerating expansion At
high redshifts, the most distant are dimmer than
they would be if the expansion were slowing. - Type II Used to measure distances independent of
the extragalactic distance scale. - The light from the explosion is 15 billion times
brighter than the Sun, which is why they are
visible from halfway across the universe. - Unfortunately, they are very rare. The last one
seen in our galaxy in 1006!
SN 1987A (Before After). Discovery date
February 23, 1987. Although its light took
170,000 years to reach Earth, it became easily
visible to the naked eye. To date, it was the
closest and brightest SN as seen from the Earth
in the past 350 years.
8Discovering Cosmic Explosions
- Must discover both nearby distant supernovae
accurately in order to provide some basis of
comparison. - Greater apparent magnitude corresponds to a
dimmer supernova, thereby indicating the SN is
farther away. - Cosmology projects used instruments that enabled
them to scan a piece of the sky larger than the
size of the moon every 5 minutes to a faintness
level that allows us to locate IA-SN halfway
across the universe. - Each image taken contains 50,000 galaxies.
- Able to survey gt 1 million galaxies in 1 night
find tens of SN. - Typically find up to 4 SN in 1 patch of sky ½ the
size of full moon.
Hubble Space Telescope
9Supernova Cosmology Project
- Goal Measure changes in the expansion rate of
the universe, which in turn would yield clues to
the origin, structure fate of the cosmos - Methodology
- Track Type IA Supernovae Standard Candles
- Visible over distances of 5 billion light years ?
Explosions are brighter than entire galaxies - Measuring their redshift and brightness
- Intrinsic brightness serves as dependable gauge
for determining distance via tools of apparent
absolute magnitude. - Findings based on data from gt 3 dozen Type IA
Supernovae corroborated by additional results
from High-Z Supernova Search Team, an independent
group. - Type IA supernovae appear dimmer than they would
if the universes expansion was constant or
slowing down because they are moving away from
us. - Conclusion Breakthrough of the year (1998)
- Accelerating expansion of the universe is due to
a mysterious, dark energy that pervades all space.
10Wheres Waldo?Find the Missing Supernova
Bright New Spot
11Wheres Waldo?Find the Missing Supernova
Computer software that subtracts the images
facilitates the process of locating supernova.
12SNAP (Supernova Acceleration Probe)
13What is SNAP?
- Proposed space-based telescope that seeks to
discover several extremely distant supernovae - Will cover wavelength range from 400-1700 nm with
spectro-photometry supernovae from redshifts of
0.3-1.7. - In measuring these supernovae, SNAP will
effectually map out, in detail, the expansion
rate of the universe at epochs varying from the
present to 10 billion years in the past. - Lawrence Berkeley National Lab University of
California at Berkeley - SNAP would orbit a 3-mirror, 2-meter reflecting
telescope in a high orbit over the Earths poles,
circling the globe every 1 or 2 weeks. - Will use radiation-tolerant, high-resistivity
CCDs. Most have poor responses to red infrared
light.
14Purpose of SNAP
- Objective Provide greater understanding of the
mechanism driving the acceleration of the
universe cosmological constant ? dark energy or
perhaps some other fundamental particle or force
yet to be discovered. - Gives several experimental measurements of
cosmological parameters statistical
uncertainties, but more importantly, will put
strong constraints on known hypothesized
cosmological models - SNAP would discover thousands of Type IA-SN at
redshifts greater than any yet found will cover
a much larger range, much more precisely! - Technical Challenges Manufacture of a wide field
instrument with 1 billion pixels, the detectors
associated electronics, the operation of the
detectors in a space environment. - High precision in a high-radiation environment is
an ongoing technological development. - SNAP will shed light on phenomena such as galaxy
clusters, gamma-ray bursters, cold dark matter,
weak lensing, asteroids, astronomical transients.
15SNAP Satellite Strategy
- Observing strategy Will monitor repeatedly
image a 20-square-degree region of sky near the
north or south ecliptic poles, discovering and
following supernovae that explode in that region. - Measures SN spectra their light curves from
their earliest moments, through their maximum
brightness, until their light has died away
with unprecedented precision. - Type IA Supernovae (up to 2,000/year x 3 year
mission lifetime). - Type II Supernovae Expected to provide an
independent precision measurement of the
cosmological parameters using the blackbody
emission from the hot type II photosphere to
obtain a luminosity-distance scale (light
curves). - Precision Instruments
- 1 billion-pixel CCD camera with a 1-square-degree
field of view and quantum efficiency gt 80, with
wavelength coverage from 350 nm to 1 micrometer - Infrared imager with field of view of up to 10 x
10 arcminutes - A 3-arm spectrograph sensitive to wavelengths
from the near ultraviolet to the near infrared
16Future Goals
- Helpful Additions
- Access to more supernovae of both high low
redshifts. - Use of Cepheids (pulsating stars) to assist in
calibration. - Plans Hopes with this Method
- More carefully control systematic errors to
ensure future conclusions are NOT dominated by
effects unrelated to cosmology. - Better characterize the equation of the state of
the dark energy leading to the observed
acceleration of objects. - Lingering Questions
- Has ? been constant over the history of the
universe? - Exactly how old is the universe?
17SOURCES
- Davies, Paul. The Last Three Minutes.
- Hawking, Stephen. Black Holes Baby Universes.
- http//cfa-www.harvard.edu/cfa/oir/Research/supern
ova/HighZ.html - http//snap.lbl.gov
- http//super.colorado.edu/michaele/Lambda/lambda.
html - http//www.pbs.org/wgbh/nova/universe
- Kaufmann Freedman. Universe.
- Parker, Barry. Invisible Matter the Fate of the
Universe. - Perlmutter, Saul.Supernovae, Dark Energy, and
the Accelerating Universe. Physics Today.