Vector field models of modified gravity and the dark sector

(2010)

Authors:

J Zuntz, TG Zlosnik, F Bourliot, PG Ferreira, GD Starkman

Vector field models of modified gravity and the dark sector

ArXiv 1002.0849 (2010)

Authors:

J Zuntz, TG Zlosnik, F Bourliot, PG Ferreira, GD Starkman

Abstract:

We present a comprehensive investigation of cosmological constraints on the class of vector field formulations of modified gravity called Generalized Einstein-Aether models. Using linear perturbation theory we generate cosmic microwave background and large-scale structure spectra for general parameters of the theory, and then constrain them in various ways. We investigate two parameter regimes: a dark-matter candidate where the vector field sources structure formation, and a dark-energy candidate where it causes late-time acceleration. We find that the dark matter candidate does not fit the data, and identify five physical problems that can restrict this and other theories of dark matter. The dark energy candidate does fit the data, and we constrain its fundamental parameters; most notably we find that the theory's kinetic index parameter $n_{\mathrm{ae}}$ can differ significantly from its $\Lambda$CDM value.

Planck pre-launch status: the Planck-LFI programme

ArXiv 1001.2657 (2010)

Authors:

N Mandolesi, M Bersanelli, RC Butler, E Artal, C Baccigalupi, A Balbi, AJ Banday, RB Barreiro, M Bartelmann, K Bennett, P Bhandari, A Bonaldi, J Borrill, M Bremer, C Burigana, RC Bowman, P Cabella, C Cantalupo, B Cappellini, T Courvoisier, G Crone, F Cuttaia, L Danese, O D'Arcangelo, RD Davies, RJ Davis, L De Angelis, G de Gasperis, A De Rosa, G De Troia, G de Zotti, J Dick, C Dickinson, JM Diego, S Donzelli, U Dörl, X Dupac, TA Enßlin, HK Eriksen, MC Falvella, F Finelli, M Frailis, E Franceschi, T Gaier, S Galeotta, F Gasparo, G Giardino, F Gomez, J Gonzalez-Nuevo, KM Górski, A Gregorio, A Gruppuso, F Hansen, R Hell, D Herranz, JM Herreros, S Hildebrandt, W Hovest, R Hoyland, K Huffenberger, M Janssen, T Jaffe, E Keihänen, R Keskitalo, T Kisner, H Kurki-Suonio, A Lähteenmäki, CR Lawrence, SM Leach, JP Leahy, R Leonardi, S Levin, PB Lilje, M López-Caniego, SR Lowe, PM Lubin, D Maino, M Malaspina, M Maris, J Marti-Canales, E Martinez-Gonzalez, M Massardi, S Matarrese, F Matthai, P Meinhold, A Melchiorri, L Mendes, A Mennella, G Morgante, G Morigi, N Morisset, A Moss, A Nash, P Natoli, R Nesti, C Paine, B Partridge, F Pasian, T Passvogel, D Pearson, L Pérez-Cuevas, F Perrotta, G Polenta, LA Popa, T Poutanen, G Prezeau, M Prina, JP Rachen, R Rebolo, M Reinecke, S Ricciardi, T Riller, G Rocha, N Roddis, R Rohlfs, JA Rubiño-Martin, E Salerno, M Sandri, D Scott, M Seiffert, J Silk, A Simonetto, GF Smoot, C Sozzi, J Sternberg, F Stivoli, L Stringhetti, J Tauber, L Terenzi, M Tomasi, J Tuovinen, M Türler, L Valenziano, J Varis, P Vielva, F Villa, N Vittorio, L Wade, M White, S White, A Wilkinson, A Zacchei, A Zonca

Abstract:

This paper provides an overview of the Low Frequency Instrument (LFI) programme within the ESA Planck mission. The LFI instrument has been developed to produce high precision maps of the microwave sky at frequencies in the range 27-77 GHz, below the peak of the cosmic microwave background (CMB) radiation spectrum. The scientific goals are described, ranging from fundamental cosmology to Galactic and extragalactic astrophysics. The instrument design and development are outlined, together with the model philosophy and testing strategy. The instrument is presented in the context of the Planck mission. The LFI approach to ground and inflight calibration is described. We also describe the LFI ground segment. We present the results of a number of tests demonstrating the capability of the LFI data processing centre (DPC) to properly reduce and analyse LFI flight data, from telemetry information to calibrated and cleaned time ordered data, sky maps at each frequency (in temperature and polarization), component emission maps (CMB and diffuse foregrounds), catalogs for various classes of sources (the Early Release Compact Source Catalogue and the Final Compact Source Catalogue). The organization of the LFI consortium is briefly presented as well as the role of the core team in data analysis and scientific exploitation. All tests carried out on the LFI flight model demonstrate the excellent performance of the instrument and its various subunits. The data analysis pipeline has been tested and its main steps verified. In the first three months after launch, the commissioning, calibration, performance, and verification phases will be completed, after which Planck will begin its operational life, in which LFI will have an integral part.

Identifying the progenitor set of present-day early-type galaxies: a view from the standard model

(2010)

Authors:

Sugata Kaviraj, Julien Devriendt, Ignacio Ferreras, Sukyoung Yi, Joseph Silk

Identifying the progenitor set of present-day early-type galaxies: a view from the standard model

ArXiv 1001.2212 (2010)

Authors:

Sugata Kaviraj, Julien Devriendt, Ignacio Ferreras, Sukyoung Yi, Joseph Silk

Abstract:

We present a comprehensive theoretical study, using a semi-analytical model within the standard LCDM framework, of the photometric properties of the progenitors of present-day early-type galaxies in the redshift range 00.7) spirals have 75-95% chance of being an early-type progenitor, while the corresponding probability for large blue spirals (M_B<-21.5, B-V<0.7) is 50-75%. The prescriptions developed here can be used to address, from the perspective of the standard model, the issue of `progenitor bias', whereby the exclusion of late-type progenitors in observational studies can lead to inaccurate conclusions regarding the evolution of the early-type population over cosmic time. (abridged)