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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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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: A pedagogical overview of cosmology in the presence of a cosmological constant, observational constraints on its magnitude, and the physics of a small (and potentially nonzero) vacuum energy are presented.
Abstract: This is a review of the physics and cosmology of the cosmological constant. Focusing on recent developments, I present a pedagogical overview of cosmology in the presence of a cosmological constant, observational constraints on its magnitude, and the physics of a small (and potentially nonzero) vacuum energy.

161 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, the consequences of the f(R/{open_square}) gravity models for the Solar System and the large-scale structure of the Universe were studied. And the evolution of cosmological matter structures was shown to be governed by an effectively time-dependent Newton's constant.
Abstract: We study the consequences of the f(R/{open_square}) gravity models for the Solar System and the large-scale structure of the Universe. The spherically symmetric solutions can be used to obtain bounds on the constant and the linear parts of the correction terms. The evolution of cosmological matter structures is shown to be governed by an effectively time-dependent Newton's constant. We also analyze the propagation of the perturbation modes. Tensor and vector modes are only slightly modified, but two new scalar degrees of freedom are present. Their causality and stability is demonstrated, and their formal ghost conditions are related to a singularity of the cosmological background. In general, the Newtonian limit of these models has no apparent conflicts with observations but can provide useful constraints.

160 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, the size and shape of the corresponding three-dimensional error volume in which an electromagnetic counterpart to a LISA event could be found, taking into account errors in the background cosmology (as expected by the time LISA flies), weak gravitational lensing (de)magnification due to inhomogeneities along the line of sight, and potential source-peculiar velocities.
Abstract: The gravitational waves (GWs) emitted during the coalescence of supermassive black holes (SMBHs) in the mass range ~104-107 M?/(1 + z) will be detectable out to high redshifts with the future Laser Interferometer Space Antenna (LISA). The distance and direction to these standard sirens can be inferred directly from the GW signal, with a precision that depends on the masses, spins, and geometry of the merging system. In a given cosmology, the LISA-measured luminosity distance translates into a redshift shell. We calculate the size and shape of the corresponding three-dimensional error volume in which an electromagnetic counterpart to a LISA event could be found, taking into account errors in the background cosmology (as expected by the time LISA flies), weak gravitational lensing (de)magnification due to inhomogeneities along the line of sight, and potential source-peculiar velocities. Weak-lensing errors largely exceed other sources of uncertainties (by a factor of ~7 for typical sources at z = 1). Under the plausible assumption that SMBH-SMBH mergers are accompanied by gas accretion leading to Eddington-limited quasar activity, we then compute the number of quasars that would be found in a typical three-dimensional LISA error volume, as a function of BH mass and event redshift. Low redshifts offer the best opportunities to identify quasar counterparts to cosmological standard sirens. For mergers of ~4 ? (105-107) M? SMBHs, the LISA error volume will typically contain a single near-Eddington quasar at z ~ 1. If SMBHs are spinning rapidly, the error volume is smaller and may contain a unique quasar out to redshift z ~ 3. This will allow a straightforward test of the hypothesis that GW events are accompanied by bright quasar activity and, if the hypothesis proves correct, will guarantee the identification of a unique quasar counterpart to a LISA event, with a B-band luminosity of LB ~ (1010-1011) L?. Robust counterpart identifications would allow unprecedented tests of the physics of SMBH accretion, such as precision measurements of the Eddington ratio. They would clarify the role of gas as a catalyst in SMBH coalescences and would also offer an alternative method to constrain cosmological parameters.

160 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors examined cosmological models with generalized phantom energy (GPE) and found that the evolution of the scale factor of the universe is time-dependent, i.e., not determined by its equation of state.

160 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, an exact Swiss-cheese model of the universe, where inhomogeneous LTB patches are embedded in a flat FLRW background, was studied to see how observations of distant sources are affected.
Abstract: We study an exact Swiss-cheese model of the universe, where inhomogeneous LTB patches are embedded in a flat FLRW background, in order to see how observations of distant sources are affected. We focus mainly on the redshift, both perturbatively and non-perturbatively: the net effect given by one patch is suppressed by (L/RH)3 (where L is the size of one patch and RH is the Hubble radius). We disentangle this effect from the Doppler term (which is much larger and has been used recently (Biswas et al 2007 J. Cosmol. Astropart. Phys. JCAP12(2007)017 [astro-ph/0606703]) to try to fit the SN curve without dark energy) by making contact with cosmological perturbation theory. Then, the correction to the angular distance is discussed analytically and estimated to be larger, , perturbatively and non-perturbatively (although it should go to zero after angular averaging).

160 citations


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