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Cosmic Microwave Background (CMB) Peter Holrick and Roman Werpachowski.

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Cosmic Microwave Background (CMB) Peter Holrick and Roman Werpachowski
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Page 1: Cosmic Microwave Background (CMB) Peter Holrick and Roman Werpachowski.

Cosmic Microwave Background (CMB)

Peter Holrick

and

Roman Werpachowski

Page 2: Cosmic Microwave Background (CMB) Peter Holrick and Roman Werpachowski.

Beginnings of the Universe

Big Bang inflation period further expansion and

cooling of the universe particle creation and

annihilation equilibrium between matter

and radiation; first dominated by radiation, then by matter

light had a perfect black body spectrum

Page 3: Cosmic Microwave Background (CMB) Peter Holrick and Roman Werpachowski.

Photon-baryon fluid

Page 4: Cosmic Microwave Background (CMB) Peter Holrick and Roman Werpachowski.

Last scattering

Some 300,000 yrs after the Big Bang, the temperature was low enough (~3000 K) to allow electrons to combine with protons, making hydrogen atoms.

Intensive Thomson scattering on charged particles in photon-baryon plasma IS OUT

Low-effective Rayleigh scattering or absorption of a discrete spectrum of frequencies by neutral hydrogen atoms (or particles) COMES IN

Universe becomes transparent to light.

Page 5: Cosmic Microwave Background (CMB) Peter Holrick and Roman Werpachowski.

Origins of CMBPhotons released in the ‘last scattering’ form CMB as

it is measured today.History of the Universe up till this point in time shows

in CMB.

last scattering

free charged particles,strong photon scattering

time

neutral hydrogen atoms, no photon scattering

Page 6: Cosmic Microwave Background (CMB) Peter Holrick and Roman Werpachowski.

What happened to CMB next? CMB temperature is

inversely proportional to the R scale factor (radiation density is proportional to the R-4 and any fixed volume expands as R3). R was equal to 0 in the Big Bang and equals 1 „now”.

Since the last scattering, CMB temp. fell because of space expansion from ~3000 K to 2.728 K now. However, it retained a perfect black body spectrum.

Page 7: Cosmic Microwave Background (CMB) Peter Holrick and Roman Werpachowski.

What do we see in CMB?

ignore this, it’s just Milky Way COBE map of CMB

ANISOTROPIES!!!!!!!ANISOTROPIES!!!!!!!

Page 8: Cosmic Microwave Background (CMB) Peter Holrick and Roman Werpachowski.

The big dipole

Our galaxy is moving with respect to CMB and we see partsof it shifted due to Doppler effect.

Page 9: Cosmic Microwave Background (CMB) Peter Holrick and Roman Werpachowski.

Correlation functions

Two point correlation function of f(x):

dxxfxfC

Correlation functions give us information on the structures existing in the spectrum of our data or given mathematical function

Page 10: Cosmic Microwave Background (CMB) Peter Holrick and Roman Werpachowski.

A simple example – the data

Data

-0,6

-0,4

-0,2

0

0,2

0,4

0,6

0,8

1

0 5 10 15 20 25 30 35 40 45 50 55 60 65 70

Measurement number n

Sig

nal a

mpl

itud

e f(

n)

n

f(n)

Page 11: Cosmic Microwave Background (CMB) Peter Holrick and Roman Werpachowski.

A simple example – the correlation

Two point correlation function

12,1

2,13,1 3

6,6

2,7 2,5 2,4

6,5

2,4 1,8 1,7

0

2

4

6

8

10

12

14

0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11

n

nfknfkCCorrelation:

C(k)

k

Page 12: Cosmic Microwave Background (CMB) Peter Holrick and Roman Werpachowski.

A simple example – the truth

4by divisiblenot n for 0.0 )5.0,5.0(

4by divisiblen for 6.0)5.0,5.0(

U

Unf

The data:

Where U(-0.5,0.5) is a random number with a uniform distribution between –0.5 and 0.5

Page 13: Cosmic Microwave Background (CMB) Peter Holrick and Roman Werpachowski.

Correlations in CMB

Two point correlation function of f(x): dxxfxfC

Two point correlation function of CMB:

Anisotropies of CMB angular spectrum: .nT

T

n

vector is a pair of angular coordinates and .

lll

nn

PCl

nT

Tn

T

T

cos

4

12'

cos'

2l+1 dipole moments

Page 14: Cosmic Microwave Background (CMB) Peter Holrick and Roman Werpachowski.

Integrating on a sphere

Page 15: Cosmic Microwave Background (CMB) Peter Holrick and Roman Werpachowski.
Page 16: Cosmic Microwave Background (CMB) Peter Holrick and Roman Werpachowski.

Structures young and old

Page 17: Cosmic Microwave Background (CMB) Peter Holrick and Roman Werpachowski.

Gravitational attraction

(film by Andrey Kravtsov)

Page 18: Cosmic Microwave Background (CMB) Peter Holrick and Roman Werpachowski.

Photon-baryon oscillations

Proof of gravitational potential fluctuations in the early Universe.

Page 19: Cosmic Microwave Background (CMB) Peter Holrick and Roman Werpachowski.

Peaks in CMB spectrum

Page 20: Cosmic Microwave Background (CMB) Peter Holrick and Roman Werpachowski.

Peaks in CMB spectrum

dxxfxfC

Page 21: Cosmic Microwave Background (CMB) Peter Holrick and Roman Werpachowski.

Curvature and angle of vision

Page 22: Cosmic Microwave Background (CMB) Peter Holrick and Roman Werpachowski.

Peaks and curvature

Remember, we’re talking about the curvature of a 3D space!

Negative curvature (open Universe) shifts the whole CMB spectrum to higher l’s (lower angles).

Page 23: Cosmic Microwave Background (CMB) Peter Holrick and Roman Werpachowski.

Baryon loading

The higher baryon density, the morecompressed the fluid. And it shows in the peaks!

light spring (low baryon density)

massive spring (high baryon density)

Page 24: Cosmic Microwave Background (CMB) Peter Holrick and Roman Werpachowski.

Photon-baryon oscillations

Proof of gravitational potential fluctuations in the early Universe.

Page 25: Cosmic Microwave Background (CMB) Peter Holrick and Roman Werpachowski.

Peaks in CMB spectrum

Page 26: Cosmic Microwave Background (CMB) Peter Holrick and Roman Werpachowski.

Damping

There is a substantial suppression of peaks beyond the third one, due to acoustic oscillation damping.

Damping can be thought of as a result of a random walk in the baryons that takes photons from cold to hot regions and vice versa, smoothing out small-scale temperature inhomogeneities.

This random walk is due to the mean free path of a photon in the photon-baryon fluid – photons slip through the baryons for short distances.

Page 27: Cosmic Microwave Background (CMB) Peter Holrick and Roman Werpachowski.

Radiation driving Radiation decayed potential wells in the radiation era. This alone would enhance high l oscillations and

eliminate alternating peak heights from baryon loading. This effect depends strongly on the cold dark matter

(CDM) to radiation ratio.

Page 28: Cosmic Microwave Background (CMB) Peter Holrick and Roman Werpachowski.

Polarization Very small,

generated only by scattering at recombination.

Caused by quadrupole anisotropies.

Can be caused by gravitational waves or vortices.

XY

Page 29: Cosmic Microwave Background (CMB) Peter Holrick and Roman Werpachowski.

Quadrupole anisotropies

Page 30: Cosmic Microwave Background (CMB) Peter Holrick and Roman Werpachowski.

‘Darkness [...] was the Universe’

First peak tells that the Universe is flat.

Second peak tells that density of baryon matter b is too low for a flat Universe.

High third peak tells that radiation could not eliminate baryon loading.

Damping of higher l peaks tells that photons could slip through baryon matter and dissipate across potential fluctuations.

there is cold dark matter and dark energy in the Universe

Lord Byron, Darkness

Page 31: Cosmic Microwave Background (CMB) Peter Holrick and Roman Werpachowski.

Precision cosmology Total energy density (BOOMERanG data) is

estimated to be 1.020.06. (=1 means flat Universe). Baryon density is estimated1 to be bh2 = 0.02.

Consistent with other estimations (deuterium in quasar lines and the theory of big-bang nucleosynthesis).

Dark energy density is estimated to be between 0.5 and 0.7 (data from galaxy clustering and type Ia supernovae luminance).

Dark matter is constrained by CMB to dmh2=0.13 0.04.

1Hubble constant h is taken to be 0.720.08 * 100km/s/MPc (data from HST).

Page 32: Cosmic Microwave Background (CMB) Peter Holrick and Roman Werpachowski.

Summary Due to low density of matter, light from the Universe

300,000 years old (age of recombination) reached us almost unchanged.

It is much colder due to expansion of the Universe. It has Gaussian fluctuations which can be completely

described by their power spectrum. We see peaks in the power spectrum. Those peaks are due to oscillations of light and matter

before the recombination. Those peaks are an immensely fruitful source of

information for the cosmologists. We are going to measure them more precisely than now!

Page 33: Cosmic Microwave Background (CMB) Peter Holrick and Roman Werpachowski.

Sources

http://background.uchicago.edu

What’s Behind Acoustic Peaks in the Cosmic Microwave Background Anisotropies, arXiv:astro-ph/0112149

CMB and Cosmological Parameters: Current Status and Prospects, arXiv:astro-ph/0204017

Bernard F. Schutz, A First Course in General Relativity


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