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Astroparticle physics Donald Perkins SUMMARY slides www.rug.nl/kvi/research/astroparticlephysics/students/index www.kvi.nl/~scholten A.M. van den Berg ([email protected]) O. Scholten ([email protected]) Summary Summary 1 2 1 Cosmological principle • On large scales the Universe is isotropic and homogeneous • physical distance can be scaled: r(t) = R(t) ro where R(t) is the scale parameter, which is the same everywhere! • Hubble’s law: dR/dt = H R(t) • Value of Hubble’s constant is: H = 71 +/- 4 km/s/Mpc • Friedmann equation derived from Newtonian mechanics Summary 3 Friedmann equations 1st 2 R 8 G m r kc 2 H 2 3 R R 2 (5.11) expansion rate of the Universe 1 R P c 2 2 Rc 3 2nd (5.19) 4 GR 3P (5.20) R c2 3 Summary kc 2 H 2R2 conservation of energy or fluid equation 4 2 Curvature of the Universe • Closed: k > 0; > 1 • Open: k < 0; < 1 • Flat: k = 0; = 1 1 Summary kc 2 H 2R2 5 Energy density and scale parameters Summary Dominant regime Equation of State Radiation 1 P c 2 3 Matter P Vacuum P c 2 Energy density Scale parameter R 4 t 2 Rt 2 2 v 2 R 3 t 2 c 3 c Rt constant 1 2 2 3 R expt 6 3 Energy density and scale parameters Energy density Scale parameter matter t⅔ matter R-3 vacuum constant log R log radiation R-4 radiation t½ log R vacuum exp(t) log t Summary 7 Energy densities at this moment • + k = r + m + + k • • • • Radiation (CMB): Total matter (galactic rotation, LSS): – Luminous baryonic matter (stars, gas, dust): – Total baryon density (visible or invisible, BBN): – Total dark matter: Vacuum energy density (SN Hubble plot, CMB): Curvature (CMB): r 5x10-5 m 0.24 lum 0.01 b 0.04 b 0.20 0.76 k 0.00 • c c2 = [ 3/(8 G) ]H02= 5.4 GeV m-3 • r c2 = 0.26 MeV m-3 (400 106 photons m-3) • m c2 = 1.2 GeV m-3 (~1 proton m-3) Summary 8 4 Age and size of the Universe • 2 R 8 G m r kc 2 H 2 3 R R 2 Friedmann equation H (t ) 2 H 02 m (0)(1 z )3 r (0)(1 z ) 4 (0) k (0)(1 z ) 2 • R(t) = R0/(1+z) thus dR/dt = -(1+z) -2 dz/dt • dt = -dz / [(1+z) H(t)] • Integrate from z=0 to z=∞ provides t0; analytical possible for a few cases; t0 = 14 Gyr • Flat static universe size is D = ct0 = 4 Gpc Summary 9 Evolution of the Universe End of 1019Ge 1015Ge 100GeV 100 MeV 1 MeV V V 0.05 MeV 4000 K 10-43 s 10-34 s 10-10 s 300 s 3x105 yr Inflation era ElectroWeak Quarkgluon 10-5 s 1s 10 K 3K 3x109 yr 15x109 yr Nucleo Recombi Galaxy/star Anti-matter Neutrinos na-tion Electrons synthesi formation s era Present era T (K) 1010 BBN (nuclei) 103 1 mn Recombination (atom) 3.105 y Time t T(K) ~ 1010 / t(s) Summary 10 10 5 End of EW unification Quark-hadron transition 1 GeV Big-Bang nucleosynthesis 1 MeV 1 keV 1010 104 1 eV decoupling of matter & radiation 10-10 10-6 Summary 1013 107 neutrino decoupling 1 meV Summary 1016 1 106 t (s) 101 Temperature (K) Energy / particle radiation dominated kT t -½ 1 TeV matter dominated kT t -⅔ 1012 3x1017 11 12 6 Big-Bang Nucleosynthesis - Universe is hot, expanding plasma of radiation & relativistic particles - roughly equal # electrons, positrons, (anti)neutrinos, and photons - nucleons outnumbered by more than a billion to one - no composite nuclei Reactions, e.g.: annihilation/creation: e + e+ + _ charge transfer: e + p e+ + n and: e + n e + p neutron decay: n p + e + e Nn / Np = exp(-Q/kT) Q = mn-mp = 1.3 MeV Summary Nn/Np 0 as T 0, but: freeze-out! neutrons are captured together with protons to make Deuterium and then Helium 13 Big-Bang Nucleosynthesis • • Bottlenecks at mass 5 and 8 (not stable) After 20 minutes the BBN stops, because the energy of particles (temperature) is too low to cross the Coulomb barrier (this will only start again under gravitational forces). 0.14 n/p 0.20 n/p 0.25 4He/p Burless, Nollett & Turner 1999 Summary 14 7 Summary 15 The WMAP results position of 1st maximum is related to curvature (total density) amplitude of 1st maximum is related to nB / n; the stronger / higher the amplitude, the more baryons Baryon-to-photon ratio η = 6.1 × 10−10 +0.3 × 10−10 -0.2 × 10−10 + m ≈ 1 Summary 16 8 Horizon and flatness problem FLATNESS PROBLEM: why is = 1 If (t=0) > 1 the Universe would have recollapsed at once If (t=0) < 1 the Universe would have cooled very quickly HORIZON PROBLEM Regions on the CMB sky separated by more than 1o had no time to interact, yet their temperature is the same to 100 ppm What is needed An initial condition of the Universe with a temperature between 1 MeV and 1014 GeV, which is almost homogenous and has = 1 to a very high precision Summary 17 distance → in thermal equilibrium time → Summary Thus 2 different regions can connect and thermal equilibrium can be obtained in the whole physical region. 18 9 Summary 19 Old and new inflation Summary 20 10 Summary m = matter density = vacuum density 21 m = 0.30 +/- 0.05 ≈ 2 m = 0.70 +/- 0.05 m + = 1.02 +/- 0.05 Summary 22 11 Baryon asymmetry • Number of baryons >>> Number of anti-baryons • Detection based on detectors in satellites (BESS, PAMELA) • Moon shadow technique, absorption + magnetic deflection (MILAGRO) • Limit at 10-4 consistent with production of anti-particles in the interstellar matter by high-energy collisions of normal matter particles Summary 23 Matter-antimatter asymmetry: NB/NantiB > 104 1. Baryon number violating interactions • Kind of obvious, because we see more matter than anti-matter • However, no experimental proof 2. Non-equilibrium situation • In thermal equilibrium, the particle densities depend only on the mass of the particles and on the temperature. Because particles and anti-particles have identical masses, no asymmetry could develop; thus we need non-equilibrium! 3. CP and C violation • Also kind of obvious, the make an asymmetry we should be able to distinguish matter from anti-matter • Experimental proof of C violation (weak interaction) and CP violation (neutral kaon system; see 3.15) Summary 24 12 Andrei Sakharov Summary 25 Dark Matter • • Astronomical DM searches – Evidence: • Galaxy rotation curves and clusters of galaxies • Weak lensing of clusters of galaxies • Filaments of the cosmological web – Hints: planets and MACHO’s (not enough?) Physics searches – WIMPs: Underground laboratories: no conclusive evidence (only DAMA), still many efforts (cryo, scintillation) – Neutrino mass • Mass difference measured by oscillation ! Summary 26 13 NGC 2403 inside hub: M(<r) ~ r3 v ~ r Summary outside hub: M(<r) ~ r0 v ~ r-1/2 mass to light ratio mass(r) = light(r) 27 DM Direct detection techniques • • • • • WIMP + nucleus WIMP + nucleus + recoil energy Measure the nuclear recoil energy Recoil nuclei: Ekinetic ~few keV Backgrounds from nuclear processes: neutrons! However, look for oscillations, annually or daily 220 km/s orbital velocity of Sun Summary 30 km/s orbital velocity of Earth 28 14 Detection of Cosmic Rays and Neutrinos • • Cosmic ray detection – Direct (balloon, satellites, also for anti-particles!) – Indirect (air showers; Pierre Auger Observatory) • Light emission from sky – Cherenkov and Fluorescence • Light emission from particles in the shower – Cherenkov and scintillators • Radio detection High-energy neutrino detection – Muon track for high-energy muon neutrinos (Cherenkov) – Radio detection in dielectric solids (Cherenkov) – Large detectors under design (KM3NeT) and operation (ICECUBE and Mediterranean projects) Summary 29 Summary 30 15 Sources of Cosmic Rays and Neutrinos • • • • • • • Power-law spectrum for cosmic rays (Fermi acceleration) Sources – Galactic (supernova’s) – Extragalactic – New physics ??? Interactions with photons – GZK mechanism (CMB + proton leads to neutrinos + …) All experiments have registered particles with E > 1020 eV (super GZK) First sources identified ??? No cosmic neutrino events (except for SN1978A and the sun) Large detectors under design (KM3NeT) and operation (ICECUBE and Mediterranean projects) Summary 31 HESS / VERITAS HESS telescopes in Namibia VERITAS telescopes at Kitt Peak Arizona Gamma ray not to scale ~ 10 km ~ 1o Ch er en ko v lig ht Particle shower ~ 250 m Summary 32 16 HESS picture of Galactic Center High intensity High intensity High intensity subtracted Summary 33 Summary 34 17 Star formation • • • • • • Stars are formed from gas clouds under gravitational contraction Virial theorem: <P>V = -(1/3) Egrav (hydrostatic equilibrium) Ignition of hydrogen fusion starts in the core at kT ~ 1 keV; need tunneling through coulomb barrier! Gamow peak pp cycles and CNO cycle neutrino’s as probe for interior Quiescent burning can last long (Hertzsprung-Russell diagram) Maxwell-Boltzmann distribution exp(-E/kT) relative probability • Summary tunnelling through Coulomb barrier exp(- EG / E ) Gamow peak E0 kT energy E0 35 Star death • • • • • • After exhausting of hydrogen fuel, further contraction, leading to fusion of helium, red Giant For light stars, end is white dwarf with degenerate electron gas If core > 1.4 M catastrophic collapse; type II SN, neutron star; degenerate neutron gas If core > 4-6 M same but ends as black hole For heavy stars, fusion goes on until iron Explosive hydrogen burning in binary systems (material from normal star falls onto white dwarf (type Ia novae) Summary 36 18 Summary 37 19