Institution
Institute of Cosmology and Gravitation, University of Portsmouth
About: Institute of Cosmology and Gravitation, University of Portsmouth is a based out in . It is known for research contribution in the topics: Galaxy & Redshift. The organization has 297 authors who have published 1207 publications receiving 76919 citations.
Topics: Galaxy, Redshift, Dark energy, Dark matter, Cosmic microwave background
Papers published on a yearly basis
Papers
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TL;DR: In this article, the authors used 3D cosmic shear surveys for a class of unified dark matter (UDM) models, where a single scalar field mimics both Dark Matter (DM) and Dark Energy (DE).
Abstract: We present parameter estimation forecasts for future 3D cosmic shear surveys for a class of Unified Dark Matter (UDM) models, where a single scalar field mimics both Dark Matter (DM) and Dark Energy (DE). These models have the advantage that they can describe the dynamics of the Universe with a single matter component providing an explanation for structure formation and cosmic acceleration. A crucial feature of the class of UDM models we use in this work is characterized by a parameter, c1 (c = 1), that is the value of the sound speed at late times and on which structure formation depends. We demonstrate that the properties of the DM-like behaviour of the scalar field can be estimated with very high precision with large-scale, fully 3D weak lensing surveys. We found that 3D weak lensing significantly constrains c1, and
20 citations
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TL;DR: In this article, the authors present an analysis of the cross-correlation between the CMB and the large-scale structure of the universe in Unified Dark Matter (UDM) scalar field cosmologies.
Abstract: We present an analysis of the cross-correlation between the CMB and the large-scale structure (LSS) of the Universe in Unified Dark Matter (UDM) scalar field cosmologies. We work out the predicted cross-correlation function in UDM models, which depends on the speed of sound of the unified component, and compare it with observations from six galaxy catalogues (NVSS, HEAO, 2MASS, and SDSS main galaxies, luminous red galaxies, and quasars). We sample the value of the speed of sound and perform a likelihood analysis, finding that the UDM model is as likely as the LambdaCDM, and is compatible with observations for a range of values of c_\infinity (the value of the sound speed at late times) on which structure formation depends. In particular, we obtain an upper bound of c_\infinity^2 \leq 0.009 at 95% confidence level, meaning that the LambdaCDM model, for which c_\infinity^2 = 0, is a good fit to the data, while the posterior probability distribution peaks at the value c_\infinity^2=10^(-4) . Finally, we study the time dependence of the deviation from LambdaCDM via a tomographic analysis using a mock redshift distribution and we find that the largest deviation is for low-redshift sources, suggesting that future low-z surveys will be best suited to constrain UDM models.
20 citations
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TL;DR: In this paper, the authors examined the cosmological properties of the spectrum of inflationary tensor fluctuations, that arise when breaking some of the symmetries or requirements usually imposed on the dynamics of perturbations.
Abstract: Using an effective field theory approach to inflation, we examine novel properties of the spectrum of inflationary tensor fluctuations, that arise when breaking some of the symmetries or requirements usually imposed on the dynamics of perturbations. During single-clock inflation, time-reparameterization invariance is broken by a time-dependent cosmological background. In order to explore more general scenarios, we consider the possibility that spatial diffeomorphism invariance is also broken by effective mass terms or by derivative operators for the metric fluctuations in the Lagrangian. We investigate the cosmological consequences of the breaking of spatial diffeomorphisms, focussing on operators that affect the power spectrum of fluctuations. We identify the operators for tensor fluctuations that can provide a blue spectrum without violating the null energy condition, and operators for scalar fluctuations that lead to non-conservation of the comoving curvature perturbation on superhorizon scales even in single-clock inflation. In the last part of our work, we also examine the consequences of operators containing more than two spatial derivatives, discussing how they affect the sound speed of tensor fluctuations, and showing that they can mimic some of the interesting effects of symmetry breaking operators, even in scenarios that preserve spatial diffeomorphism invariance.
20 citations
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TL;DR: In this article, the rescattering of cosmic microwave background photons after cosmic reionization can give a significant linear contribution to the temperature-matter cross-correlation measurements, which can contribute to degree scale crosscorrelations and could affect the interpretation of similar correlations resulting from the integrated Sachs-Wolfe effect.
Abstract: In this paper, we show how the rescattering of cosmic microwave background photons after cosmic reionization can give a significant linear contribution to the temperature–matter cross-correlation measurements. These anisotropies, which arise via a late-time Doppler effect, are on scales much larger than the typical scale of non-linear effects at reionization; they can contribute to degree scale cross-correlations and could affect the interpretation of similar correlations resulting from the integrated Sachs–Wolfe effect. While expected to be small at low redshifts, these correlations can be large given a probe of the density at high redshift, and so could be a useful probe of the cosmic reionization history.
20 citations
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TL;DR: In this article, the evolution of GWs after inflation in a brane-world cosmology embedded in five-dimensional anti-de Sitter (AdS 5 ) bulk spacetime is discussed.
20 citations
Authors
Showing all 297 results
Name | H-index | Papers | Citations |
---|---|---|---|
Robert C. Nichol | 187 | 851 | 162994 |
Daniel Thomas | 134 | 846 | 84224 |
Will J. Percival | 129 | 473 | 87752 |
Tommaso Treu | 126 | 715 | 49090 |
Claudia Maraston | 103 | 362 | 59178 |
Marco Cavaglia | 93 | 372 | 60157 |
Ashley J. Ross | 90 | 248 | 46395 |
David A. Wake | 89 | 214 | 46124 |
László Á. Gergely | 89 | 426 | 60674 |
L. K. Nuttall | 89 | 253 | 54834 |
Rita Tojeiro | 87 | 229 | 43140 |
Roy Maartens | 86 | 432 | 23747 |
David Keitel | 85 | 253 | 56849 |
Davide Pietrobon | 83 | 152 | 62010 |
Gong-Bo Zhao | 81 | 287 | 35540 |