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Dark Energy David Spergel Princeton University & APC Moriond Meeting: Blois May 22 2008 What is the Dark Energy? We don’t know What Can We Measure? Growth Rate Distance Measures Homogenous GR (FRW) What Can We Measure? Growth Rate Distance Measures Distance Measures Angular Diameter BAO Luminosity SN SUPERNOVA •Proven record of success •Standardizable Candles •Systematics are a concern: dust, evolution, … •Have we reached the systematic limit? •Most effective at low redshift Distance Measures Angular Diameter BAO Luminosity SN BAO •Proven record of success (SDSS) •Standard Rulers (Calibrated from the CMB) •Cosmic Variance Limited (Need Large Volume) •Most effective at z ~ 1- 2 Radius = sound speed x time 150 Mpc 5/8/2008 STScI Bennett / ADEPT ADEPT-9 0.23 Myrs CDM z=1440 Photon-Baryon Fluid Each initial over-density/over-pressure launches a spherical sound wave Over-pressure causes the wave to travel outward at the sound speed (57% speed of light) The photon-baryon fluid remains coupled until z = 1090, so the CMB calibrates the baryon fluctuations 5/8/2008 STScI Bennett / ADEPT ADEPT-10 23.4 Myrs z=79 CDM At z = 1090: Photon pressure decouples CMB travels to us Sound speed plummets Wave stalls at a radius of 150 Mpc For z < 1090… Baryons Gravity couples dark matter to baryons Photons Dark matter + baryon shells and centers seed galaxy formation The universe has a super-position of these shells 5/8/2008 STScI Bennett / ADEPT ADEPT-11 474.5 Myrs z=10 Baryons Photons 5/8/2008 STScI BAO generate a 1% bump in the galaxy correlation function at 150 Mpc CDM Bennett / ADEPT ADEPT-12 CDM with baryons is a good fit: c2 = 16.1 with 17 dof. 0.75 Gpc3 3816 deg2 Pure CDM rejected at Dc2 = 11.7 (3.4s) Ratio of the distances to z =0.35 and z = 1090 to 4% accuracy 150 Mpc (h-1=1.4) Absolute distance to z = 0.35 determined to 5% accuracy Measuring Growth Calibrate to CMB Measure Linear Amptitude Count Peaks Measure Velocity Measuring Linear Amplitude •Weak Lensing • LSST: Highest FOM •Systematics: •Distortions in Telescopes •Shear-Galaxy Alignment Effect •Can be controlled by dividing galaxies into redshift slices •Essential to know redshift distribution Measuring Growth Calibrate to CMB Measure Linear Amptitude Count Peaks Measuring Linear Amplitude •Galaxy Redshift Surveys • Need to Measure bias: •CMB Lensing, Internal Measures •Systematics: •Scale-dependent bias Measure Velocity Measuring Growth Calibrate to CMB Measure Linear Amptitude Count Peaks Measure Velocity Count Peaks: •Need to relate observable (X-ray Properties, Lensing Signal, SZ signal) to Mass •Systematics: •Time-evolution in Mass/Observable Relation Measuring Growth Calibrate to CMB Measure Linear Amptitude Count Peaks Redshift Space Distortions •Systematics: •“Finger of God Effects” •Galaxy Bias (Less Sensitive) Measure Velocity Current Limits Vikhlinin et al. (2008) Vikhlinin et al. (2008) Self-Consistency Distance Indicators measure H(a) CMB measures matter density, WmH2 Redshift distortion measures growth rate of structure Acquaviva et al. (2008) Future Limits Upcoming Large Redshift Surveys: Lensing Surveys SDSS III ADEPT LSST Pan-STARRS BAO: ADEPT SN SNAP LSST Future Experiments Major Projects Ground: DES, Pan-Starrs, LSST Space: • JDEM: ADEPT, DESTINY, SNAP • ESA: DUNE, SPACE Hopefully have multiple methods Complementary Approach Use space for space-only measurements Conclusions Observational Probes of Dark Energy Is the dark energy a constant with time? Does GR fail at large scales? GR + cosmological constant consistent with current astronomical data Upcoming experiments should test GR at 1% level and constrain w(z) at 1% level