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Announcements •Don’t forget about your project. Presentations will be next Monday May 1 at 3:20pm. A written paper is also due at the same time. Exam 4 is after the presentations •Last exam will cover from Chapter 9 Rotating Black Holes through Chapter 13. All essay exam…pick five from a list of eight to ten. Exam 4 samples have been updated to include Chapter 13 What parameters do we measure? H0: current value of the Hubble “constant” k: curvature parameter WM: mass/energy density parameter WDM: dark matter density parameter WL: cosmological constant parameter q0: deceleration parameter Determining these parameters will determine which model best fits the universe Measuring H0 Simple enough: measure the recessional velocity and distance to a bunch of galaxies and plot the data on a Hubble plot…the slope equals H0 A complication for H0: proper motion Andromeda galaxy approach speed is ~110 km/s We are on a collision course with the Andromeda galaxy. Other galaxies have real motion with respect to us which may be comparable to the Hubble flow A major complication: how do you measure the distance? Determining the distance to the closest galaxies is relatively easy but the farther away it is, the more difficult it becomes What is needed are standard candles Cepheid variables can be seen from a large distance but after ~100 Mly they are no longer distinguishable from the background glow Type Ia supernovae make the best standard candle When a white dwarf star exceeds its mass limit (1.4MSun) it produces a Type Ia supernova which can be seen from billions of lightyears away Results from Type Ia Supernova observations Hubble Constant and the Age of the Universe Measuring the Shape Factor The sum of the angles around a triangle depends on the geometry but you have to measure really big triangles to see it (i.e. billions of lightyears on a side) We can get the shape factor from the CBR The angular size of the fluctuations gives us the shape Watch Geometry of the Universe WMAP video Measuring the Angular size of galaxies and other objects also shows the shape factor How much mass is there in the universe? WM ? And as a sub question W DM ? Gravity Lensing is a means of measuring the mass in the universe Observing hot gas in galaxy clusters also measures mass Dynamical Methods rely on understanding the dynamics of galaxy clusters and the hot gas bound by them Galaxy rotation curves can give individual galaxy masses Observations of Large Scale Structure provides another independent method of finding WM Big Bang Nucleosynthesis also puts constraints on the amount of baryonic matter Measuring the relative abundance of deuterium, lithium and helium-3 is one of the most difficult measurements to make requiring high precision spectroscopy The results indicate more dark matter than baryonic matter The next question is: Is it hot dark matter or cold dark matter? Most models indicate CDM dominates over HDM But what is CDM? Measuring WL How do you measure something when you don’t even know what it is? For the most part WL is found by inference Observations of the CBR tell us the universe is flat (W = 1). Other observations tell us Wmatter ≈ 0.3 so WL ≈ 0.7 The constituents of the universe according to Planck Add all the observations together and the result is a universe that has a positive cosmological constant and is accelerating Planck’s Summery of the cosmological quantities