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(some) 21st Century Experiments in Cosmology Mário Santos (CENTRA – IST) PASC Winter School - Sesimbra 2007 Decision makers… • Europe: – ESFRI (European Strategy Forum on Research Infrastructures) – European Roadmap for the next 15-20 years – Astronet (national resarch organizations + ESA + ESO) – Strategic plan for European Astronomy (Science Vision / Infrastructure Roadmap) – ESO (European Southern Observatory) / ESA (European Space Agency) – ESA Cosmic Vision, 2015-2025 • US: – NASA (Beyond Einstein Program) – National Academies / National Research Council / Board on Physics and Astronomy: Astronomy and Astrophysics Decadal Survey (2010) Astronet Infrastructure Road Map PANEL A - High energy, astro-particle astrophysics and gravitational waves • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • AGILE AMS Argos-X Auger North Cherenkov Telescope Array Einstein Gravitational Wave Telescope GLAST IceCube INTEGRAL Km3Net LIGO/Advanced LIGO LISA Spektr-RG SVOM Swift Simbol-X VIRGO/Advanced VIRGO XMM-Newton • ESA Cosmic Vision Statements of Interest • EDGE • GRIPS - GRB Investigations via Polarimetry and Spectroscopy • Space Observatory for the study of the Universe at Ultra High Energies • The Gamma-Ray Imager Mission • XEUS Astronet Infrastructure Road Map • PANEL B - UVOIR and radio/mm, including survey instruments • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • ALMA APEX CCAT • ESA Cosmic Vision Statements of Interest E-ELT e-MERLIN – A New Window to the Universe: Very Low Frequency Astrophysics (VLFA) European VLBI Network – B-Pol GAIA – Darwin Gemini – DUNE: The Dark Universe Explorer GranTeCan – Enabling science for DARWIN. PEGASE : a IRAM space interferometer to study stellar JWST environments and low mass objects KOI – Far Ultraviolet Space Observatory LBT – FIRI - the Far-InfraRed Interferometer LOFAR – Fresnel Interferometric Imager – Luciola LSST Plan for multiplexed spectrograph on 8-10m class telescopes – Measurement of cosmological magnetic fields in Lyman-alpha clouds through the paramagnetic Prospects of Antarctica for UV/optical/IR/radio astronomy Faraday effect Sardinia Radio Telescope – Millimetron SKA – PLATO - PLAnetary Transits and Oscillations of stars Stellar Imager Concept – SPACE : the SPectroscopic All-sky Cosmic The Modern Universe Space Telescope Explorer VLT/VLT instruments – SPICA: The next generation IR space VLTI observatory World Space Observatory – Stellar and Galactic Environment Survey (SAGE) – – – Super-Earth Explorer SEE-COAST The Celestial Exoplanet Survey Occulter The Molecular Hydrogen Explorer (H2EX) Planck • Satellite to measure the Cosmic Microwave Background radiation (Intensity and Polarization) • Constraints on: dark matter, dark energy, reionization, neutrino mass, Inflation… • Launch: 31st July 2008 COBE ( K) Planck ( K) CMB Inflation Probes • Aim: to measure the full sky B-mode polarization and detect the primordial gravitational waves generated during Inflation • Launch? B-POL • B-POL (ESA) • EPIC – Einstein Polarization Interferometer for Cosmology (NASA) • CMB Pol (NASA) B-mode polarization measurements Dark Energy Missions • Dune - the Dark Universe Explorer (ESA) – Constrain the dark energy equation of state and provide a dark matter map of the Universe through the measurement of the gravitational weak lensing effect (from the galaxy shear) Dark energy missions • SPACE (ESA) - Spectroscopic All-sky Cosmic Explorer – Full 3-d galaxy map with high precision spectroscopy – Baryon acoustic oscillations and dark energy constraints NASA's Beyond Einstein Program (Sept. 2007) • SNAP (NASA) – Supernova Acceleration Probe – SNIa measurements + weak lensing • Destiny (NASA) • ADEPT (NASA) • Launch: 2017/2018 ? LISA (Laser Interferometer Space Antenna) • Direct detection of gravitational waves: – – – – – Binaries (black holes, neutron stars, etc) in the Milky Way Massive black hole mergers from other galaxies Primordial gravitational waves Low frequencies (< 1 Hz) Lauch: 2020? (NASA/ESA) JWST (James Webb Space Telescope) • Hubble Space Telescope successor • NASA / ESA / CSA • Launch: 2013 • Large Infrared telescope – 6.5 m diameter • Science: – The end of the dark ages (Reionization) – Galaxy assembly – The birth of stars – Planets and origin of life LSST (The Large Synoptic Survey Telescope) • Cosmic Cartography: – Aperture: 8.4 m – 10 square degrees snapshots every 15s – Total available sky in 3 nights – FoV: 20000 degrees2 – Full movie over 5 years • Science: – Camera: 3 Gpixels – Over 109 galaxies – First light: 2015 – 106 SNIa – Dark energy constraints from weak lensing and baryon acoustic oscillations – Near earth objects detection The new “digital telescopes” • Large radio interferometers (many simple antennas) • Signal digitized – combined in computers to emulate large collecting area • Large collecting area and high resolution at . 200 MHz ) Good to probe the high redshift Universe (z>6) through the 21cm line LOFAR (Low Frequency Array) • 30 MHz < < 240 MHz • 15000 antennas • Spread over 100 Km in diameter • End of 2008: 20 stations (100 antennas each) • Note: – FOV / 2/d2 (d – antenna “size”) – Resolution / D/ (D – maximum separation) SKA (Square Kilometre Array) ESFRI Roadmap – 2006 report “A radio telescope with an effective collecting area more than 30 times greater than the largest telescope ever built will reveal the dawn of galaxy formation, as well as many other new discoveries in all fields of astronomy” SKA: Specs • Several x 106 m2 total collecting area • 100 MHz < < 10 GHz • Baselines up to 3000 Km • Beginning of operation: 2015 • Full operation: 2020 • At z=8 (158 MHz): – – – – FOV ~ 200 deg2 ~ 1.3’ (5 Km) ~ 2 Jy T ~ 15 mK SKADS (SKA Design Studies) • International collaboration: establish experimental design and technologies used for SKA • CENTRA – IST joined recently the SKADS consortium: participant in the DS2 design studies (Science and Astronomical Data Simulations) • Key Science projects: – Probing the dark ages (Reionization) – Galaxy evolution, cosmology and dark energy – Strong field tests of gravity using pulsars and black holes – The origin and evolution of Cosmic Magnetism – Cradle of Life Reionization Z=15.2 Z=10.0 • Today ~ 99% of H is ionized • Process: star formation and subsequent ionization of the IGM • Complex history: 6 < z <17 (500 million years) • Simulation: 100 Mpc/h side, (720)3 cells, ~ 24 billion particles Z=7.4 21cm radiation • Use hyperfine transition line in hydrogen atoms: n=1, l =0, F=1 1S1/2 1420 MHz (21 cm) n=1, l =0, F=0 • No need for bright sources (seen against the CMB) • Probe directly the neutral hydrogen distribution in the Universe and the Epoch of Reionization CMB HI cloud Final intensity The 21cm signal The ionization fraction Corresponding 21cm signal (brightness temperature) • 1420 MHz line - 90 MHz < < 200 MHz for 6 < z < 15 • Need radio interferometers - 21cm experiments! Making 3-d maps with SKA Santos et al arXiv: 0708.2424 • Tomographic view of the Universe between z=19 and z=6 • Sensitive to: ionization, dark matter, IGM gas temperature, Lyman alpha background… 21cm signal: Statistics Synch. P-S Galat. f-f Extragal. f-f 21cm CMB z=9.2 =140MHz • • Huge foreground contribution - doable? Yes! (see M. Santos et al, Astrophys.J. 625 (2005), 575 and Wang et al, Astrophys.J. 650 (2006) 529) 3d Power Spectrum: – – Simulation (thin curves) versus analytical model (thick curves) From bottom to top: z=7.4, 10.0, 15.2, 20.6 Cosmological and Astrophysical parameter Constraints M. Santos and A. Cooray, Phys.Rev. D74 (2006) 083517 • XH – neutral fraction, RxH – bubble size • Frequency range: 135MHz – 167 MHz (7.5 < z <9.5) • Marginalized over foregrounds Conclusions • Interested in Cosmology? – Keep an eye on *at least* the following experiments: • Planck, B-POL, DUNE, SNAP, LISA, JWST, LSST, SKA