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Lectures on Dark Energy Probes Eiichiro Komatsu (Max-Planck-Institut fr Astrophysik) Challenges in Modern Cosmology, Natal, Brazil May 8 and 9, 2014 The lecture slides are available at


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SLIDE 1

Lectures on Dark Energy Probes

Eiichiro Komatsu (Max-Planck-Institut für Astrophysik) Challenges in Modern Cosmology, Natal, Brazil May 8 and 9, 2014

The lecture slides are available at

http://www.mpa-garching.mpg.de/~komatsu/lectures--reviews.html

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SLIDE 2

Topics

  • In this lecture, we will cover
  • Cosmic microwave background
  • Galaxy redshift surveys
  • Galaxy clusters
  • as “dark energy probes.” However, we do not have

time to cover

  • Type Ia supernovae
  • Weak gravitational lensing
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SLIDE 3
  • Simple routines for computing various cosmological

quantities [many of which are shown in this lecture] are available at

  • Cosmology Routine Library (CRL):
  • http://www.mpa-garching.mpg.de/~komatsu/crl/
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SLIDE 4

Defining “Dark Energy”

  • It is often said that there are two approaches to

explain the observed acceleration of the universe.

  • One is “dark energy,” and
  • The other is a “modification to General Relativity.”
  • However, there is no clear distinction between

them, unless we impose some constraints on what we mean by “dark energy.”

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SLIDE 5

DE vs MG: Example #1

  • Consider an action given by [with 8πG=1]
  • Perform a conformal transformation

Z d4x√−g ✓R + αR2 2 + Lmatter ◆ gµν → ˆ gµν = (1 + 2αR)gµν

  • Define a scalar field
  • Then…

φ = r 3 2 ln(1 + 2αR)

Matter is minimally coupled to gravity via √-g

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SLIDE 6

DE vs MG: Example #1

  • The action becomes
  • with a potential
  • Therefore, a modified GR model with R2 is equivalent to

a model with a dark energy field, φ, coupled to matter

  • This is generic to models with

Z d4x p −ˆ g ˆ R 2 − 1 2 ˆ gµν∂µφ∂νφ − V (φ) + e−2√

2 3 φLmatter

! V (φ) = 1 8α ⇣ 1 − e−√

2 3 φ⌘2

αR2 → f(R)

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SLIDE 7

DE vs MG: Example #2

  • Consider an action given by [with 8πG=1]
  • And a FLRW metric with scalar perturbations
  • Then the relation between Φ and Ψ is given by

Z d4x√−g ✓R + f(R) 2 + Lmatter ◆ ds2 = −(1 + 2Ψ)dt2 + a2(t)(1 + 2Φ)dx2

  • (Here, “matter” does not have anisotropic stress)

r2(Ψ + Φ) =

d2f dR2

1 + d

f dR

r2(δR) 6= 0

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SLIDE 8

DE vs MG: Example #2

  • Consider an action given by [with 8πG=1]
  • And anisotropic stress of dark energy
  • Then the relation between Φ and Ψ is given by
  • DE anisotropic stress can mimic f(R) gravity

Z d4x√−g ✓R 2 + Ldark energy + Lmatter ◆ T i

j = Pdeδi j + Pde(rirj 1

3δi

jr2)πde

r2(Ψ + Φ) = a2Pdeπde 6= 0

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SLIDE 9

Defining “Dark Energy”

  • Therefore, we shall use the following terminology:
  • By “dark energy”, we mean a fluid which
  • has an equation of state of Pde < –ρde/3,
  • does not couple to matter, and
  • does not have anisotropic stress
  • This “dark energy” fluid can be distinguished from

modifications to General Relativity

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SLIDE 10

Goals of Dark Energy Research

  • We wish to determine the nature of dark energy. But,

where should we start?

  • A breakthrough in science is often made when the

standard model is ruled out.

  • “Standard model” in cosmology is the ΛCDM model.

We wish to rule out dark energy being Λ, a cosmological constant

  • The most important goal of dark energy research is to

find that the dark energy density, ρde, depends on time

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SLIDE 11

Measuring Dark Energy

  • We can measure the dark energy density only via

its effect on the expansion of the universe. Namely, we wish to measure the Hubble expansion rate, H(z), as a function of redshifts H2(z) = 8πG 3 ⇥ ρmatter(0)(1 + z)3 + ρde(z) ⇤ ln ρde(z) ρde(0) = 3 Z z dz0 1 + z0 [1 + w(z0)]

  • Energy conservation gives [with w(z)=Pde(z)/ρde(z)]
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SLIDE 12

100 200 300 400 500 600 700 800 1 2 3 4 5 6 Hubble Expansion Rate, H(z) [km/s/Mpc] Redshift, z 70.*sqrt(0.3*(1.+x)**3+0.7) 70.*sqrt(0.3*(1.+x)**3+0.7*(1.+x)**(3.*(1-0.9))) 70.*sqrt(0.3*(1.+x)**3+0.7*(1.+x)**(3.*(1-1.1)))

Ωm = 0.3 Ωde = 0.7 H0 = 70 km/s/Mpc w=–0.9 w=–1.1

H(z): Small Effect!

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SLIDE 13

20 40 60 80 100 120 140 0.2 0.4 0.6 0.8 1 Hubble Expansion Rate, H(z) [km/s/Mpc] Redshift, z 70.*sqrt(0.3*(1.+x)**3+0.7) 70.*sqrt(0.3*(1.+x)**3+0.7*(1.+x)**(3.*(1-0.9))) 70.*sqrt(0.3*(1.+x)**3+0.7*(1.+x)**(3.*(1-1.1)))

w=–0.9 w=–1.1 Ωm = 0.3 Ωde = 0.7 H0 = 70 km/s/Mpc

  • w>–1: For a given value of H0 at present, the

expansion rate is greater in the past, as the dark energy density increases toward high redshifts

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SLIDE 14

1000 2000 3000 4000 5000 6000 1 2 3 4 5 6 Comoving Angular Diameter Distance, dA(z) [Mpc/h] Redshift, z ’redshift_da_w1.txt’u 1:($2*(1.+$1)) ’redshift_da_w09.txt’u 1:($2*(1.+$1)) ’redshift_da_w11.txt’u 1:($2*(1.+$1))

Ωm = 0.3 Ωde = 0.7 dA(z) = Z z dz0 H(z0)

Comoving Angular Diameter Distance

w=–0.9 w=–1.1

  • w>–1: For a given value of H0 at present,

dA is smaller, as the expansion rate is greater in the past

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SLIDE 15

Growth of Perturbation

  • The expansion of the universe also determines how fast

perturbations grow. An intuitive argument is as follows.

  • The growth time scale of matter perturbations [free-fall

time, tff] is given by

d2r dt2 = −4πGρmatter 3 r tff ≈ 1 √Gρmatter

  • The matter perturbation growth is determined by

competition between the free-fall time and the expansion time scale, texp, texp ≡ 1 H ≈ 1 p G(ρmatter + ρde)

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SLIDE 16

Growth of Perturbation

  • The matter perturbation cannot grow during the

dark-energy-dominated era, ρde >> ρmatter, because the expansion is too fast texp ⇡ 1 p G(ρmatter + ρde) ⌧ 1 pGρmatter ⇡ tff

  • Therefore, measuring the [suppression of]

growth rate of matter perturbations can also be used to measure the effect of dark energy on the expansion rate of the universe

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SLIDE 17

Growth Equation

  • Writing the redshift dependence of matter density

perturbations as δmatter(z) ∝ g(z) 1 + z

  • The evolution equation of g(z) is given by

d2g d ln(1 + z)2 − 5 2 + 1 2(Ωk(z) − 3w(z)Ωde(z))

  • dg

d ln(1 + z) +  2Ωk(z) + 3 2(1 − w(z))Ωde(z)

  • g(z) = 0

*Strictly speaking, this formula is valid when the contribution of DE fluctuations to the gravitational potential is negligible compared to matter

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SLIDE 18
  • The growth is normalised to unity at

high redshift, g(z) -> 1 for z >> 1

  • w>–1: For a given Ωde today, DE

becomes dominant earlier for w>–1, giving earlier/more suppression in the growth of matter perturbations

0.75 0.8 0.85 0.9 0.95 1 1 2 3 4 5 6 Linear growth, g(z)=(1+z)D(z) Redshift, z ’redshift_g_w1.txt’ ’redshift_g_w09.txt’ ’redshift_g_w11.txt’

w=–0.9 w=–1.1 Ωm = 0.3 Ωde = 0.7

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SLIDE 19

Cosmic Microwave Background

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SLIDE 20

DE vs CMB

  • Temperature anisotropy of the cosmic microwave

background provides information on dark energy by

  • Providing the amplitude of fluctuations at z=1090
  • Providing the angular diameter distance to

z=1090

  • Integrated Sachs-Wolfe (ISW) effect
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SLIDE 21

Growth: Application #1

  • Use the CMB data to fix

the amplitude of fluctuations at z=1090

  • Varying w then gives

various values of the present-day matter fluctuation amplitude, σ8

  • Data on σ8 [i.e., large-

scale structure data at lower redshifts] can then determine the value of w WMAP5 [present]

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SLIDE 22

Growth: Application #2

  • Integrated Sachs-Wolfe effect [Sachs&Wolfe 1967]
  • As CMB photons travel from z=1090 to the

present epoch, their energies change due to time- dependent gravitational potentials

dpµ dt + Γµ

αβ

pαpβ p0 = 0 d[ln(ap) + Ψ] dt = ˙ Ψ − ˙ Φ ds2 = −(1 + 2Ψ)dt2 + a2(t)(1 + 2Φ)dx2 [geodesic equation] with [p2 ≡ gijpipj]

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SLIDE 23

Growth: Application #2

  • Integrated Sachs-Wolfe effect
  • The right hand side vanishes

during the matter-dominated (MD) era, while Ψ and Φ decay during the DE-dominated era

  • ISW is a direct probe of dg/dt

δTISW T = Z t0

t∗

dt ( ˙ Ψ − ˙ Φ) = 2Ψ(tMD) Z t0

tMD

dt ˙ g

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SLIDE 24
  • The growth derivative vanishes at

high redshifts where the universe is dominated by matter

  • w>–1: For a given Ωde today, DE

becomes dominant earlier for w>–1, giving earlier suppression in the growth of matter perturbations w=–0.9 w=–1.1 Ωm = 0.3 Ωde = 0.7

  • 0.4
  • 0.35
  • 0.3
  • 0.25
  • 0.2
  • 0.15
  • 0.1
  • 0.05

0.05 1 2 3 4 5 6 Linear growth derivative, dg/dlna=-dg/dln(1+z) Redshift, z ’redshift_dgdlna_w1.txt’ ’redshift_dgdlna_w09.txt’ ’redshift_dgdlna_w11.txt’

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SLIDE 25

Ωb = 0.05 Ωcdm = 0.25 Ωde = 0.7 H0 = 70 km/s/Mpc

  • The peak positions are given by l=k*dA, where dA

is the angular diameter distance to z=1090. w>–1 shifts the peaks to the left because dA is smaller

1000 2000 3000 4000 5000 6000 7000 100 200 300 400 500 600 700 800 900 1000 CMB Temperature Power Spectrum, l(l+1)Cl/(2pi) [uK2] Multipole, l ’lcdm_cl_lensed.dat’u 1:($2*2.726e6**2) ’wcdm_cl_lensed_w09.dat’u 1:($2*2.726e6**2) ’wcdm_cl_lensed_w11.dat’u 1:($2*2.726e6**2)

w=–1.1 w=–0.9

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SLIDE 26

1000 2000 3000 4000 5000 6000 7000 100 200 300 400 500 600 700 800 900 1000 CMB Temperature Power Spectrum, l(l+1)Cl/(2pi) [uK2] Multipole, l ’lcdm_cl_lensed.dat’u 1:($2*2.726e6**2) ’wcdm_cl_lensed_w09.dat’u ($1*1.01):($2*2.726e6**2) ’wcdm_cl_lensed_w11.dat’u ($1*0.99):($2*2.726e6**2)

Ωb = 0.05 Ωcdm = 0.25 Ωde = 0.7 H0 = 70 km/s/Mpc

  • The horizontal axis has been adjusted to

have the same angular diameter distance to z=1090

ISW

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SLIDE 27

850 900 950 1000 1050 1100 1150 1200 1250 5 10 15 20 25 30 CMB Temperature Power Spectrum, l(l+1)Cl/(2pi) [uK2] Multipole, l ’lcdm_cl_lensed.dat’u 1:($2*2.726e6**2) ’wcdm_cl_lensed_w09.dat’u ($1*1.01):($2*2.726e6**2) ’wcdm_cl_lensed_w11.dat’u ($1*0.99):($2*2.726e6**2)

w=–0.9 w=–1.1

  • ISW is a powerful method to detect dark

energy due to potential decays, especially in cross-correlations with galaxies

  • Unfortunately, changes in ISW due to w is

too small to detect in the CMB power spectrum, or in cross-correlations

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SLIDE 28

Galaxy Redshift Survey

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SLIDE 29

DE vs Galaxy Survey

  • Galaxy redshift surveys provide information on dark

energy by

  • Measuring dA(z) and H(z) from the standard ruler

and Alcock-Paczynski methods

  • Measuring the linear growth of matter

perturbations from the redshift space distortion

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SLIDE 30

Measuring H(z)

  • Standard ruler method applied to correlation

functions of galaxies

  • Use known, well-calibrated, specific features in

N-point correlation functions [usually N=2] of matter in angular and redshift directions

  • Mapping the observed separations of galaxies to

the comoving separations: ∆z = H(z)∆rk ∆θ = ∆r? dA(z) [Line-of-sight direction] [Angular directions] dA =

Z z dz0 H(z0)

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SLIDE 31
  • 6
  • 4
  • 2

2 4 6 8 10 12 14 16 60 80 100 120 140 Two-point Correlation Function times Separation2 Comoving Separation [Mpc/h] ’Rh_xi_real_nl_z05.txt’u 1:($2*$1**2) ’Rh_xi_real_nl_z1.txt’u 1:($2*$1**2) ’Rh_xi_real_nl_z2.txt’u 1:($2*$1**2)

z=0.5 z=1 z=2 This “feature,” i.e., a non-power-law shape, can be used to determine H(z) and dA(z) Non-linear matter 2-point correlation function

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SLIDE 32

SDSS-III/BOSS Sanchez et al. (2014)

Wow!! Volume = 10 Gpc3 # of galaxies = 690K

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SLIDE 33

dA2/H = constant

SDSS-III/BOSS Sanchez et al. (2014)

?

There are 2 angular and 1 LOS directions.

  • Averaging all three

directions yields a constraint on dA2/H

  • Not averaging

angular and LOS directions breaks degeneracy and yields dA and H

separately; but how?

Alcock-Paczynski Test

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SLIDE 34

Alcock-Paczynski [AP] Test

  • The key idea: homogeneity and isotropy of the

universe demands that the two-point correlation be isotropic in all three directions

  • (in the absence of redshift space distortion [RSD]
  • we shall come back to this shortly; but let us

ignore RSD here for simplicity) Alcock&Paczynski (1979)

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SLIDE 35

How the AP test works

  • We convert the observed angular and redshift

separations into the comoving separations, assuming dA(z) and H(z). ∆z = H(z)∆rk ∆θ = ∆r? dA(z) [Line-of-sight direction] [Angular directions] r⊥ rk Both dA and H are correct r⊥ rk If dA is wrong r⊥ rk If H is wrong Alcock&Paczynski (1979)

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SLIDE 36

How the AP test works

  • We convert the observed angular and redshift

separations into the comoving separations, assuming dA(z) and H(z). ∆z = H(z)∆rk ∆θ = ∆r? dA(z) [Line-of-sight direction] [Angular directions] r⊥ rk Both dA and H are correct r⊥ rk If dA is wrong r⊥ rk If H is wrong r⊥ rk If both are wrong Alcock&Paczynski (1979)

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SLIDE 37

dAH from the AP test

  • We tune dA and H until the correlation function in

comoving coordinates becomes isotropic [modulo RSD].

  • However, the AP test cannot give dA and H

separately; it can only give dAH.

  • Combining the AP test with the standard ruler

method giving dA2/H gives tight constraints on dA and H separately! [Shoji, Jeong & Komatsu 2009]

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SLIDE 38

There are 2 angular and 1 LOS directions.

  • Averaging all three

directions yields a constraint on dA2/H

  • SDSS-III/BOSS

Sanchez et al. (2014)

dA2/H = constant

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SLIDE 39

There are 2 angular and 1 LOS directions.

  • Averaging all three

directions yields a constraint on dA2/H

  • AP test gives dAH

SDSS-III/BOSS Sanchez et al. (2014)

d

A

H = c

  • n

s t a n t

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SLIDE 40

There are 2 angular and 1 LOS directions.

  • Averaging all three

directions yields a constraint on dA2/H

  • AP test gives dAH

dA & H determined separately!

SDSS-III/BOSS Sanchez et al. (2014)

Limits on DE

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SLIDE 41

dA ( z = 1 9 )

  • n

l y +dA2/H from BOSS +AP test from BOSS

SDSS-III/BOSS Sanchez et al. (2014)

For a long time, we had to use Type Ia supernova data to put a competitive limit on the equation of state

  • f DE, wDE.
  • With the AP test, we

can finally constrain wDE without using supernovae!

  • > Powerful check of

systematics

wDE = −0.964 ± 0.077 (68% CL; WMAP9 + BOSS)

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SLIDE 42

Redshift Space Distortion

  • Large-scale flow of galaxies into an over-density

region enhances clustering along the line of sight Kaiser (1987)

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SLIDE 43

SDSS-III/BOSS Samuthia et al. (2014)

Line-of-sight Separation [Mpc/h] Perpendicular Separation [Mpc/h]

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SLIDE 44

Line-of-sight Separation [Mpc/h] Perpendicular Separation [Mpc/h]

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SLIDE 45

μ=cosθ >0.5 μ<0.5 θ Line-of-sight Separation [Mpc/h] Perpendicular Separation [Mpc/h]

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SLIDE 46

SDSS-III/BOSS Sanchez et al. (2014)

[μ>0.5] [μ<0.5] Clear detection of RSD!

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SLIDE 47

Kaiser Effect: Derivation

  • Conservation of the number of galaxies

¯ n(1 + δs)d3s = ¯ n(1 + δr)d3r

redshift space real space

δs = 1 |J|(1 + δr) − 1

  • Jacobian matrix for real to redshift space trans. is

|J| = 1 + 1 aH ∂vk ∂x3

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SLIDE 48

Kaiser Effect: Derivation

  • Expanding to first order in perturbations

δs = 1 |J|(1 + δr) − 1

  • To determine the 2nd term, use continuity equation

|J| = 1 + 1 aH ∂vk ∂x3 with δs = δr − 1 aH ∂vk ∂x3 ˙ δr + 1 ar · v = 0

  • The linear growth rate gives

˙ δr = fHδr with f ≡ 1 + d ln g d ln a

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SLIDE 49

Kaiser Effect: Derivation

  • Going to Fourier space
  • Therefore

with ˙ δr = fHδr ˙ δr + 1 ar · v = 0 vk,k = iafH kk k2 δr,k δs,k = 1 + f k2

k

k2 ! δr,k =

  • 1 + fµ2

δr,k

where μ=cosθ, and θ is the angle between k and the line of sight

The Kaiser effect gives quadrupole dependence on μ

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SLIDE 50

Constraining Growth from the Kaiser Effect

  • The Kaiser effect gives a specific angular

dependence of the correlation function, with the coefficient given by f=1+dlng/dlna

  • It can be used to constrain dlng/dlna
  • However, the Kaiser formula is valid only in the

linear regime. We must extend it to include non- linear effects. This calculation has not been completed yet, and it is the most pressing issue in the large-scale structure community

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SLIDE 51

Galaxy Bias

  • Another complication is that galaxies are biased

tracers of the underlying mass distribution. In the linear regime, δgalaxy=bδmatter ~ bσ8, in real space

  • In redshift space, schematically

δg(µ = 0) ∝ bσ8 δg(µ = 1) ∝ (b + f)σ8

  • Therefore, the Kaiser effect yields fσ8, rather than f

itself, unless we know the value of the bias factor, b. [This information can be obtained from weak lensing data, if available]

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SLIDE 52

SDSS-III/BOSS Samushia et al. (2014)

dAH(z=0.57) fσ8(z=0.57)

AP and RSD can be separated by the current data to some extent

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SLIDE 53

AP & RSD: Summary

Shoji, Jeong & Komatsu (2009)

dA2/H=const dAH=const.

All parameters but the over-all amplitude are fixed

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SLIDE 54

AP & RSD: Summary

Shoji, Jeong & Komatsu (2009)

  • Amplitude
  • Linear RSD

are marginalised

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SLIDE 55

AP & RSD: Summary

Shoji, Jeong & Komatsu (2009)

  • Amplitude
  • Linear RSD
  • Non-linear RSD

are marginalised

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SLIDE 56

AP & RSD: Summary

Shoji, Jeong & Komatsu (2009)

  • Amplitude
  • Linear RSD
  • Non-linear RSD
  • Primordial

spectrum shape

  • are marginalised
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SLIDE 57

DE and Galaxy Survey

  • In summary, galaxy surveys can constrain DE via:
  • dA2/H from the standard ruler method,
  • dAH from the AP test, and
  • f=1+dg/dlna from [linear] RSD
  • The first two constraints give the dark energy density,

ρDE. Does it vary with time?

  • GR+dark energy relates dg/dlna with H. Does GR fit?
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SLIDE 58

This may be possible in 10 years from now…

Euclid White Paper, arXiv:1206.1225

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SLIDE 59

Galaxy Clusters

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SLIDE 60

DE vs Galaxy Clusters

  • Counting galaxy clusters provides information on

dark energy by

  • Providing the comoving volume element which

depends on dA(z) and H(z)

  • Providing the amplitude of matter fluctuations as

a function of redshifts, σ8(z)

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SLIDE 61

Where is a galaxy cluster?

Subaru image of RXJ1347-1145 (Medezinski et al. 2009) http://wise-obs.tau.ac.il/~elinor/clusters

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SLIDE 62

Where is a galaxy cluster?

Subaru image of RXJ1347-1145 (Medezinski et al. 2009) http://wise-obs.tau.ac.il/~elinor/clusters

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SLIDE 63

Subaru image of RXJ1347-1145 (Medezinski et al. 2009) http://wise-obs.tau.ac.il/~elinor/clusters

slide-64
SLIDE 64

Hubble image of RXJ1347-1145 (Bradac et al. 2008)

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SLIDE 65

Chandra X-ray image of RXJ1347-1145 (Johnson et al. 2012)

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SLIDE 66

Chandra X-ray image of RXJ1347-1145 (Johnson et al. 2012) Image of the Sunyaev-Zel’dovich effect at 150 GHz [Nobeyama Radio Observatory] (Komatsu et al. 2001)

slide-67
SLIDE 67

Multi-wavelength Data

Optical:

  • 102–3 galaxies
  • velocity dispersion
  • gravitational lensing

X-ray:

  • hot gas (107–8 K)
  • spectroscopic TX
  • Intensity ~ ne2L

IX = Z dl n2

eΛ(TX)

SZ [microwave]:

  • hot gas (107-8 K)
  • electron pressure
  • Intensity ~ neTeL

ISZ = gν σT kB mec2 Z dl neTe

slide-68
SLIDE 68

Galaxy Cluster Counts

  • We count galaxy clusters over a certain region in

the sky [with the solid angle Ωobs]

  • Our ability to detect clusters is limited by noise

[limiting flux, Flim]

  • For a comoving number density of clusters per unit

mass, dn/dM, the observed number count is

N = Ωobs Z ∞ dz d2V dzdΩ Z ∞

Flim(z)

dF dn dM dM dF

slide-69
SLIDE 69

1 2 3 4 5 6 0.5 1 1.5 2 Comoving Volume, V(<z), over 1000 deg2 [Gpc3/h3] Redshift, z ’redshift_volume_1000_w1.txt’u 1:($2*1e-9) ’redshift_volume_1000_w09.txt’u 1:($2*1e-9) ’redshift_volume_1000_w11.txt’u 1:($2*1e-9)

Ωm = 0.3 Ωde = 0.7 V (< z) = Z

1000 deg2 dΩ

Z z dz0 d2V dz0dΩ w=–0.9 w=–1.1

slide-70
SLIDE 70

Mass Function, dn/dM

  • The comoving number density per unit mass range,

dn/dM, is exponentially sensitive to the amplitude

  • f matter fluctuations, σ8, for high-mass, rare objects
  • By “high-mass objects”, we mean “high peaks,”

satisfying 1.68/σ(M) > 1

slide-71
SLIDE 71

Mass Function, dn/dM

  • The comoving number density per unit mass range,

dn/dM, is exponentially sensitive to the amplitude

  • f matter fluctuations, σ8, for high-mass, rare objects
  • By “high-mass objects”, we mean “high peaks,”

satisfying 1.68/σ(M) > 1

slide-72
SLIDE 72

1e-14 1e-12 1e-10 1e-08 1e-06 0.0001 0.01 1e+14 1e+15 Comoving Number Density of DM Halos [h3/Mpc3] (Tinker et al. 2008) Dark Matter Halo Mass [Msun/h] ’Mh_dndlnMh_z0_s807.txt’ ’Mh_dndlnMh_z05_s807.txt’ ’Mh_dndlnMh_z1_s807.txt’ ’Mh_dndlnMh_z0_s808.txt’ ’Mh_dndlnMh_z05_s808.txt’ ’Mh_dndlnMh_z1_s808.txt’

z=0

σ8=0.8 σ8=0.7

z=0.5

σ8=0.8 σ8=0.7

z=1

σ8=0.8 σ8=0.7

  • dn/dM falls off exponentially in the

cluster-mass range [M>1014 Msun/h], and is very sensitive to the value of σ8 and redshift

  • This can be understood by the

exponential dependence on 1.68/σ(M,z)

Ωb = 0.05, Ωcdm = 0.25 Ωde = 0.7, w = −1 H0 = 70 km/s/Mpc

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SLIDE 73

Chandra Cosmology Project Vikhlinin et al. (2009)

Cumulative mass function from X-ray cluster samples

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SLIDE 74

Chandra Cosmology Project Vikhlinin et al. (2009)

Cumulative mass function from X-ray cluster samples

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SLIDE 75

The Challenge

  • Cluster masses are not directly
  • bservable
  • The observables “F” include
  • Number of cluster member

galaxies [optical]

  • Velocity dispersion [optical]
  • Strong- and weak-lensing

masses [optical]

N = Ωobs Z ∞ dz d2V dzdΩ Z ∞

Flim(z)

dF dn dM dM dF

Miss estimation of the masses from the observables severely compromises the statistical power

  • f galaxy clusters as a DE probe
  • X-ray intensity [X-ray]
  • X-ray spectroscopic

temperature [X-ray]

  • SZ intensity [microwave]
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SLIDE 76

HSE: the leading method

  • Currently, most of the mass cluster estimations rely
  • n the X-ray data and the assumption of hydrostatic

equilibrium [HSE]

  • The measured X-ray intensity is proportional to

∫ne2 dl, which can be converted into a radial profile of electron density, ne(r), assuming spherical symmetry

  • The spectroscopic data give a radial electron

temperature profile, Te(r) These measurements give an estimate of the electron pressure profile, Pe(r)=ne(r)kBTe(r)

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SLIDE 77

HSE: the leading method

  • Recently, more SZ measurements, which are

proportional to ∫nekBTe dl, are used to directly obtain an estimate of the electron pressure profile

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SLIDE 78
  • In the usual HSE assumption, the total gas pressure

[including contributions from ions and electrons] gradient balances against gravity

  • ngas = nion+ne = [(3+5X)/(2+2X)]ne = 1.93ne
  • Assuming Tion=Te [which is not always satisfied!]
  • Pgas(r) = 1.93Pe(r)
  • Then, HSE
  • gives an estimate of the total mass of a cluster, M

HSE: the leading method

1 ρgas(r) ∂Pgas(r) ∂r = −GM(< r) r2

[X=0.75 is the hydrogen mass abundance]

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SLIDE 79

Limitation of HSE

  • The HSE equation
  • only includes thermal pressure; however, not all

kinetic energy of in-falling gas is thermalized

  • There is evidence that there is significant non-

thermal pressure support coming from bulk motion of gas (e.g., turbulence)

  • Therefore, the correct equation to use would be

1 ρgas(r) ∂Pgas(r) ∂r = −GM(< r) r2 1 ρgas(r) ∂[Pth(r) + Pnon−th(r)] ∂r = −GM(< r) r2

Not including Pnon-th leads to underestimation of the cluster mass!

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SLIDE 80

Planck SZ Cluster Count, N(z)

Planck CMB prediction with MHSE/Mtrue=0.8 Planck CMB+SZ best fit with MHSE/Mtrue=0.6

40% HSE mass bias?! Planck Collaboration XX, arXiv:1303.5080v2

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SLIDE 81

Analytical Model for Non- Thermal Pressure

  • Basic idea 1: non-thermal motion of gas in clusters is

sourced by the mass growth of clusters [via mergers and mass accretion] with efficiency η

  • Basic idea 2: induced non-thermal motion decays

and thermalizes in a dynamical time scale

  • Putting these ideas into a differential equation:

Shi & Komatsu (2014) [σ2=P/ρgas]

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SLIDE 82

Non-thermal Fraction, fnth=Pnth/(Pth+Pnth)

a p p r

  • x

i m a t e fi t t

  • h

y d r

  • s

i m u l a t i

  • n

s

η = turbulence injection efficiency β = [turbulence decay time] / tdynamical

Non-thermal fraction increases with radii because of slower turbulence decay in the outskirts

Shi & Komatsu (2014)

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SLIDE 83

Non-thermal Fraction, fnth=Pnth/(Pth+Pnth)

η = turbulence injection efficiency β = [turbulence decay time] / tdynamical

Non-thermal fraction increases with redshifts because of faster mass growth in early times Shi & Komatsu (2014)

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SLIDE 84

With Pnon-thermal computed

  • We can now predict the X-ray and SZ observables,

by subtracting Pnon-thermal from Ptotal, which is fixed by the total mass

  • We can then predict what the bias in the mass

estimation if hydrostatic equilibrium with thermal pressure is used

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SLIDE 85

Pressure [eV/cm3]

total pressure predicted thermal

  • bserved thermal

Shi & Komatsu (2014) Excellent match with observations!

[black line versus green dashed]

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SLIDE 86

[Hydrostatic Mass] / [True Mass]

Typically ~10% mass bias for massive clusters detected by Planck; seems difficult to get anywhere close to ~40% bias

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SLIDE 87

Remarks on Modifications to GR

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SLIDE 88

Testing Modified GR #1

  • Modifications to GR generically predict that two potentials in the

metric are different: Φ ≠ –Ψ

  • This, in principle, modifies gravitational lensing, which is

proportional to Ψ–Φ. This is equal to 2Ψ in GR, but not in modified GR

  • However, in scalar-tensor theories [i.e., modified gravity

theories in which modifications are equivalent to introducing a new scalar degree of freedom], null geodesics is not modified

  • This happens because, schematically, two potentials are

modified such that Φ -> Φ+β, Ψ -> Ψ+β [where β is some function], hence Ψ–Φ is unmodified

  • No effect on gravitational lensing in scalar-tensor theories
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SLIDE 89

Testing Modified GR #1

  • On the other hand, only Ψ enters in Euler’s equation

and determines velocities of motion of non-relativistic

  • bjects [such as galaxies]
  • Ψ is modified from GR even in scalar-tensor theories;

thus, velocities of galaxies are also modified

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SLIDE 90

Testing Modified GR #1

  • Implication:
  • the “dynamical mass” of galaxy clusters estimated

from velocity dispersion of the member galaxies, and

  • the “lensing mass” estimated from gravitational

lensing

  • are different in modified GR.
  • E.g., the lensing mass is equal to the true mass in

scalar-tensor theories of gravity, but the dynamical mass is different from the true mass

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SLIDE 91
  • In GR, knowing the expansion history of the universe

yields the growth history of linear perturbations as well

  • In modified GR, there is no such correspondence;

thus, the data on both the expansion history [i.e., H(z)] and the data on the growth history [i.e., g] test modifications to GR

Testing Modified GR #2

d2g d ln(1 + z)2 − 5 2 + 1 2(Ωk(z) − 3w(z)Ωde(z))

  • dg

d ln(1 + z) +  2Ωk(z) + 3 2(1 − w(z))Ωde(z)

  • g(z) = 0

*Strictly speaking, this formula is valid when the contribution of DE fluctuations to the gravitational potential is negligible compared to matter

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SLIDE 92

Summary

  • CMB, galaxy surveys, and galaxy clusters can be used to

measure two crucial quantities: the expansion rate, H(z), and the growth history, g(z), which in turn test the most important hypothesis: does the dark energy density vary with time?

  • We did not cover Type Ia supernovae or weak/strong

gravitational lensing in this lecture, but they also provide information on H(z) and g(z)

  • CMB has limited sensitivity to w but provides an important

anchor [the sound horizon and dA to z=1090]

  • Non-linearity in redshift space distortion must be understood

before using galaxy surveys to learn about g(z)

  • Understanding the hydrostatic mass bias is the most important

challenge to using galaxy clusters as a cosmological probe