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Acoustic Waves in the Universe as a Powerful Cosmological Probe. Eiichiro Komatsu Department of Astronomy, UT Acoustic Seminar, March 2, 2007. Our Universe Is Old. The latest determination of the age of our Universe is: 13.73 0. 16 billion years How was it determined?
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Acoustic Waves in the Universe as a Powerful Cosmological Probe Eiichiro Komatsu Department of Astronomy, UT Acoustic Seminar, March 2, 2007
Our Universe Is Old • The latest determination of the age of our Universe is: • 13.730.16 billion years • How was it determined? • In essence, (time) = (distance)/c was used. • “Distance” to what?? • It must be a distance to the farthest place we could reach. The Rule: “Farthest Place” = “Earliest Epoch” • For the errorbar to make sense, obviously it must be earlier than 160 million years after the Big Bang. • So, what is the earliest epoch that we can see directly?
How far have we reached? • Our Universe is 13.73 billion years old. • The most distant galaxy currently known is seen at 800 million years after the Big Bang. • 1/17 of the age of the Universe today
How far can we reach? • Galaxies cannot be used to determine the age of the Universe accurately. • Distant galaxies are very faint and difficult to find. • Fundamental “flaw” in this method: galaxies cannot be as old as the Universe itself --- after all, it takes some time (~hundreds of millions of years) to form galaxies. • So, is 800 million years after the Big Bang the farthest place we can ever reach? NO!
Full Sky Microwave Map Penzias & Wilson, 1965 • Uniform, “Fossil” Light from the Big Bang • Isotropic (2.7 K everywhere) • Unpolarized Galactic Anti-center Galactic Center
Helium Superfluidity T = 2.17 K CMB T = 2.73 K
COBE/DMR, 1992 Isotropic? CMB is anisotropic! (at the 1/100,000 level)
COBE to WMAP COBE 1989 COBE Press Release from the Nobel Foundation [COBE’s] measurements also marked the inception of cosmology as a precise science. It was not long before it was followed up, for instance by the WMAP satellite, which yielded even clearer images of the background radiation. WMAP WMAP 2001
CMB: The Most Distant Light CMB was emitted when the Universe was only 380,000 years old. WMAP has measured the distance to this epoch. From (time)=(distance)/c we obtained 13.73 0.16 billion years.
Use Ripples in CMB to Measure Composition of the Universe • The Basic Idea: Hit it and listen to the cosmic sound. • Analogy: Brass and ceramic can be discriminated by hitting them and listening to the sound created by them. • We can use sound waves to determine composition. • When CMB was emitted the Universe was a dense and hot soup of photons, electrons, protons, Helium nuclei, and dark matter particles. • Ripples in CMB propagate in the cosmic soup: the pattern of the ripples, the cosmic sound wave, can be used to determine composition of the Universe!
Composition of Our Universe Determined by WMAP Mysterious “Dark Energy” occupies 75.93.4% of the total energy of the Universe. 76% 4% 20%
Do the Fourier Analysis: The Angular Power Spectrum • CMB temperature anisotropy is very close to Gaussian; thus, its spherical harmonic transform, alm, is also Gaussian. • Since alm is Gaussian, the power spectrum: completely specifies statistical properties of CMB.
What the Sound Wave Tells Us Distance to z~1100 Baryon-to-Photon Ratio Dark Energy/ New Physics? Matter-Radiation Equality Epoch
R. Sachs and A. Wolfe, 1967 • SOLVE GENERAL RELATIVISTIC BOLTZMANN EQUATIONS TO THE FIRST ORDER IN PERTURBATIONS
Introduce temperature fluctuations, Q=DT/T: Expand the Boltzmann equation to the first order: where describes the Sachs-Wolfe effect: purely GR-induced fluctuations.
For metric perturbations in the form of: Newtonian potential Curvature perturbations the Sachs-Wolfe terms are given by where g is the directional cosine of photon propagations. • The 1st term = gravitational redshift • The 2nd term = integrated Sachs-Wolfe effect h00/2 (higher T) Dhij/2
Sound Waves From Hydrodynamical Perturbations • When coupling is strong, photons and baryons move together and behave as a single, perfect fluid. • When coupling becomes less strong, they behave as an imperfect fluid with viscosity. • So, the problem can be formulated as “hydrodynamics”. (cf S-W effect was pure GR.) Collision term describing coupling between photons and baryons via electron scattering.
Boltzmann to Hydrodynamics • Multipole expansion • Energy density, Velocity, Stress Energy density Velocity Stress
CONTINUITY EULER Photon-baryon coupling Photons f2=9/10 (no polarization), 3/4 (with polarization) FA = -h00/2, FH = hii/2 tC=Thomson scattering optical depth
Baryons Cold Dark Matter
Approximate Equation System in the Strong Coupling Regime SOUND WAVE!
A Big, Big Challenge • Let’s face it: “WMAP has done a great job in determining composition of our Universe very accurately, but…” • We don’t really understand the nature of dark energy or dark matter. They occupy 96% of the total energy in our Universe! • Even the most optimistic cosmologists would not dare to say, “we understand our Universe”. Definitely not. • The next frontier: What is the nature of dark energy and dark matter?
A Holy Grail: Go Even Farther Back… • We cannot use CMB to probe the epoch earlier than 380,000 years after the Big Bang directly. • Photons were scattered by electrons so frequently that the Universe was literally “foggy” to photons. • We would need to stop relying on photons (EM waves). What else? • Neutrinos can probe the epoch as early as a second after the Big Bang. • Gravity Waves: the ultimate probe of the earliest moment of the Universe.
Go Farther! CMB Neutrino Gravity Wave
Summary & Conclusions • CMB offers the earliest and most precise picture of the Universe that we have today. • A wealth of cosmological information, e.g. • The age of the Universe = 13.73 billion years • Composition: DE (76%), DM (20%), Ordinary Mat. (4%) • CMB has limitations. • It does not tell us much about the nature of the most dominant energy components in the Universe: Dark Energy (DE) and Dark Matter (DM) • Expect some news on DM from the Large Hadron Collider (LHC) next year. • DE is harder to do. • Go beyond CMB. • Neutrinos! (Very low energy: 1.94K -> hard to detect) • Gravity waves! The ultimate cosmological probe.