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Cosmology

About: Cosmology is a research topic. Over the lifetime, 18004 publications have been published within this topic receiving 631028 citations. The topic is also known as: physical cosmology & cosmologies.


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Proceedings ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The Hydrogen Intensity and Real-time Analysis eXperiment (HIRAX) is a new 400{800MHz radio interferometer under development for deployment in South Africa.
Abstract: The Hydrogen Intensity and Real-time Analysis eXperiment (HIRAX) is a new 400{800MHz radio interferometer under development for deployment in South Africa. HIRAX will comprise 1024 six meter parabolic dishes on a compact grid and will map most of the southern sky over the course of four years. HIRAX has two primary science goals: to constrain Dark Energy and measure structure at high redshift, and to study radio transients and pulsars. HIRAX will observe unresolved sources of neutral hydrogen via their redshifted 21-cm emission line (`hydrogen intensity mapping'). The resulting maps of large-scale structure at redshifts 0.8{2.5 will be used to measure Baryon Acoustic Oscillations (BAO). BAO are a preferential length scale in the matter distribution that can be used to characterize the expansion history of the Universe and thus understand the properties of Dark Energy. HIRAX will improve upon current BAO measurements from galaxy surveys by observing a larger cosmological volume (larger in both survey area and redshift range) and by measuring BAO at higher redshift when the expansion of the universe transitioned to Dark Energy domination. HIRAX will complement CHIME, a hydrogen intensity mapping experiment in the Northern Hemisphere, by completing the sky coverage in the same redshift range. HIRAX's location in the Southern Hemisphere also allows a variety of cross-correlation measurements with large-scale structure surveys at many wavelengths. Daily maps of a few thousand square degrees of the Southern Hemisphere, encompassing much of the Milky Way galaxy, will also open new opportunities for discovering and monitoring radio transients. The HIRAX correlator will have the ability to rapidly and efficiently detect transient events. This new data will shed light on the poorly understood nature of fast radio bursts (FRBs), enable pulsar monitoring to enhance long-wavelength gravitational wave searches, and provide a rich data set for new radio transient phenomena searches. This paper discusses the HIRAX instrument, science goals, and current status.© (2016) COPYRIGHT Society of Photo-Optical Instrumentation Engineers (SPIE). Downloading of the abstract is permitted for personal use only.

184 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, the evolution of a Friedmann-Robertson-Walker universe filled with a viscous simple fluid is analyzed, which complies with relativistic causality since dissipative signals travelling at superluminal speeds are forbidden.
Abstract: The evolution of a Friedmann-Robertson-Walker universe filled with a viscous simple fluid is analysed. At variance with other treatments the authors' approach complies with relativistic causality since dissipative signals travelling at superluminal speeds are forbidden. This is because use is made of the extended thermodynamics theory of irreversible processes instead of the conventional one. As a consequence some novel results arise. In particular, the initial de Sitter phase of the deflationary universe does not occur. Likewise, the generalized second law of thermodynamics is studied within this context.

183 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors consider the possibility that the observed particle-antiparticle imbalance in the universe is due to baryon numbers, C, and CP nonconservation, and make general observations and describe a framework for making quantitative estimates.
Abstract: We consider the possibility that the observed particle-antiparticle imbalance in the universe is due to baryon-numbers, C, and CP nonconservation. We make general observations and describe a framework for making quantitative estimates.

183 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, the effect of thermodynamics on the spectrum of primordial gravitational waves was investigated by numerically solving the evolution equation of tensor perturbations in the expanding universe, and it was shown that the effects of free-streaming photons and neutrinos gave rise to some additional damping features overlooked in previous studies.
Abstract: In this paper, we revisit the estimation of the spectrum of primordial gravitational waves originated from inflation, particularly focusing on the effect of thermodynamics in the Standard Model of particle physics. By collecting recent results of perturbative and non-perturbative analysis of thermodynamic quantities in the Standard Model, we obtain the effective degrees of freedom including the corrections due to non-trivial interaction properties of particles in the Standard Model for a wide temperature interval. The impact of such corrections on the spectrum of primordial gravitational waves as well as the damping effect due to free-streaming particles is investigated by numerically solving the evolution equation of tensor perturbations in the expanding universe. It is shown that the reevaluation of the effects of free-streaming photons and neutrinos gives rise to some additional damping features overlooked in previous studies. We also observe that the continuous nature of the QCD crossover results in a smooth spectrum for modes that reenter the horizon at around the epoch of the QCD phase transition. Furthermore, we explicitly show that the values of the effective degrees of freedom remain smaller than the commonly used value 106.75 even at temperature much higher than the critical temperature of the electroweak crossover, and that the amplitude of primordial gravitational waves at a frequency range relevant to direct detection experiments becomes $\mathcal{O}(1)\,\%$ larger than previous estimates that do not include such corrections. This effect can be relevant to future high-sensitivity gravitational wave experiments such as ultimate DECIGO. Our results on the temperature evolution of the effective degrees of freedom are made available as tabulated data and fitting functions, which can also be used in the analysis of other cosmological relics.

182 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors analyse the dependence of the mass function on the way haloes are identified and establish if this can cause departures from universality, using a set of different N-body cosmological simulations (Le SBARBINE simulations).
Abstract: The abundance of galaxy clusters can constrain both the geometry and growth of structure in our Universe. However, this probe could be significantly complicated by recent claims of non-universality-non-trivial dependences with respect to the cosmological model and redshift. In this work, we analyse the dependence of the mass function on the way haloes are identified and establish if this can cause departures from universality. In order to explore this dependence, we use a set of different N-body cosmological simulations (Le SBARBINE simulations), with the latest cosmological parameters from the Planck collaboration; this first suite of simulations is followed by a lower resolution set, carried out with different cosmological parameters. We identify dark matter haloes using a spherical overdensity algorithm with varying overdensity thresholds (virial, 2000, 1000, 500, 200 rho(c) and 200 rho(b)) at all redshifts. We notice that, when expressed in terms of the rescaled variable., the mass function for virial haloes is a nearly universal as a function of redshift and cosmology, while this is clearly not the case for the other overdensities we considered. We provide fitting functions for the halo mass function parameters as a function of overdensity, that allow us to predict, to within a few per cent accuracy, the halo mass function for a wide range of halo definitions, redshifts and cosmological models. We then show how the departures from universality associated with other halo definitions can be derived by combining the universality of the virial definition with the expected shape of the density profile of haloes.

182 citations


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Performance
Metrics
No. of papers in the topic in previous years
YearPapers
20241
2023768
20221,518
2021737
2020784
2019782