1 / 41

Holographic and agegraphic dark energy models

Holographic and agegraphic dark energy models. Yun Soo Myung Inje University, Gimhae, Korea. Contents. 1. Introduction 2. Sourced Friedmann equations 3. Interacting holographic dark energy model 4. Agegraphic dark energy model 5. New agegraphic dark energy model

dennis
Download Presentation

Holographic and agegraphic dark energy models

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Holographic and agegraphic dark energy models Yun Soo Myung Inje University, Gimhae, Korea

  2. Contents 1. Introduction 2. Sourced Friedmann equations 3. Interacting holographic dark energy model 4. Agegraphic dark energy model 5. New agegraphic dark energy model 6. Discussions

  3. 1.Introduction

  4. Introduction Main issue of the present cosmology :How to explain the present accelerating universe?  Candidates for DE with w<-1/3 1) cosmological constant (w=-1) 2) quintessence (w>=-1) 3) K-essence (w>=-1) 4) holographic dark energy (w>=-1) 5) phantom matter (w<-1) Can we rule out a dynamical DE model? Can we rule out the phantom phase of w<-1? phantom matter violates all the energy conservation laws.

  5. Introduction Dark energy a repulsive form of gravity in space present 9 billion years ago.  its effect becomes more dominant as the universe expands. Einstein the first person to realize that the empty space is not the space as nothingness.  introduce the cosmological constant to balance the universe against the inward pull of its own gravity.

  6. Introduction-cosmological constant

  7. Introduction-another models • Holographic dark energy density • 2) Vacuum fluctuation energy density • 3) Geometric mean of • 4) Casimir energy of QM • 5) Uncertainty of • distance in holographic form cosmology • 6) Entanglement energy? • --------------------------------- • 2),3)Astro-ph/0411044, • 4)gr-qc/0405111, 5) PLB469,243

  8. Introduction-HDEM

  9. Introduction-gravitational holography **Gravitational Holographylimits number of states accessible to a system including gravity. **Considering an infinite contribution to the vacuum energy is not correct when the gravity is present. **Projection from states in bulk-volume to states on covering surface holographic principle.

  10. Introduction-HDEM

  11. 2. Sourced Friedmann equations

  12. Sourced Friedmann equations

  13. Macroscopic mechanism for energy transfer in two-fluid model

  14. Microscopic mechanism for energy transfer in two-fluid model

  15. 3. Interacting holographic dark energy model

  16. Interacting holographic dark energy model

  17. Interacting holographic dark energy model –density parameters

  18. Interacting holographic dark energy model – effective EOS

  19. Non-interacting holographic dark energy model-EOS

  20. Interacting holographic dark energy model – comments After a long decaying, two are the new same fluid like cosmological constant.  It seems that there is no mechanism to generate a phantom phase by turning on an interaction between two fluids.

  21. Two quantities for the cosmological evolution : EOS and squared speed of sound velocity (SSV) 1) EOS determines the nature of background evolution 2)SSV evaluated to 0th order determines the stability of background evolution: 3) Linear perturbation: : stability of a first-order perturbation : instability of a first-order perturbation

  22. EOS and SSV for HDEM

  23. EOS and SSV for Chaplygin gas and tachyon models

  24. 4. Agegraphic dark energy model (ADEM) The Karolyhazy relation: The time-energy uncertainty in the Minkowiski spacetime: ‘ Vacuum energy density with the parameter : • No causality problem. • Problem for describing the matter-dominated universe • in the par fast.

  25. ADEM:non-interacting case • The first Friedmann equation: • continuity equation: • density parameter:

  26. ADEM: non-interacting case • Pressure: • EOS: • The evolution equation: • SSV:

  27. Result of ADEM (solidEOS, dashedSSV) n=2.0 n=0.9 n=1.2 • No dark energy-dominated universe in the far future. • for n=0.9 (n<1.0), no phantom phase of .

  28. ADEM: interacting case with • continuity equation: • The evolution equation: • EOS: • SSV: with

  29. Interacting case using EOS (solidEOS, dashedSSV) n=0.9 n=1.2 n=2.0 : phantom phase

  30. When using effective EOS, we find no phantom phase • Effective EOS: • SSV: : no phantom phase

  31. 5. New agegraphic dark energy model (NADEM) Vacuum energy density: • No causality problem. • Resolving problem for describing the matter-dominated universe • in the par fast.

  32. NADEM: non-interacting case with matter-dominated universe • EOS: • The evolution equation: SSV : Evolution is nontrivial because EOS is function of x and .

  33. Result of NADEM • whole evolution depends on the parameter critically.

  34. Region of evolution • Considering the connection between x and z : • Hence our region from x=-20( ) to x=20 ( ) covers the whole region of evolution.

  35. Result of NADEM • far past : : non-acceptable • far future : for all n, The squared speed is always negative for

  36. NADEM with matter-and radiation- dominated universes • continuity equation: • The evolution equation: • SSV:

  37. Result of NADEM • far past : radiation-dominated universe • far future : dark energy –dominated universe( )

  38. Interacting case of NADEM with • continuity equation: • The evolution equation: • EOS: • SSV: with

  39. Result- No simulation • The evolution of the native EOS and the SSV are similar to NADEM except including the phantom phase. • When using effective EOS, we expect that No phantom phase. the whole evolution of the universe implies negative squared speed.

  40. 6. Discussions • Comparison between NADEM and HDEM • The squared speed for ADEM is always negative, so it is classically unstable like HDEM with future event horizon. • The NADEM is no better than the HDEM for the description of the dark energy-dominated universe.

  41. Discussions Similarity HDEM with particle horizon ADEM HDEM with future event horizon NADEM Comment For n>nc, NADEM could describe Matter (radiation)-dominated Universe.

More Related