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Starry Monday at Otterbein

Welcome to. Starry Monday at Otterbein. Astronomy Lecture Series -every first Monday of the month- April 7, 2008 Dr. Uwe Trittmann. Today’s Topics. Dark Matter and Dark Energy – The Dark Side of the Universe The Night Sky in April. Starting Point.

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Starry Monday at Otterbein

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  1. Welcome to Starry Monday at Otterbein Astronomy Lecture Series -every first Monday of the month- April 7, 2008 Dr. Uwe Trittmann

  2. Today’s Topics • Dark Matter and Dark Energy – The Dark Side of the Universe • The Night Sky in April

  3. Starting Point • Before we can say anything about the “dark side”, we have to answer the following questions: • What is “bright” matter? • What do we know about “bright” matter?

  4. “Bright” Matter • All normal or “bright” matter can be “seen” in some way • Stars emit light, or other forms of electromagnetic radiation • All macroscopic matter emits EM radiation characteristic for its temperature • Microscopic matter (particles) interact via the Standard Model forces and can be detected this way

  5. Atom:Nucleus and Electrons The Structure of Matter Nucleus: Protons and Neutrons (Nucleons) Nucleon: 3 Quarks | 10-10m | | 10-14m | |10-15m|

  6. Elementary Particles All ordinary nuclear matter is made out of quarks: Up-Quark Down-Quark (charge +2/3) (charge -1/3) In particular: Proton uud charge +1 Nucleons Neutron udd charge 0 (composite particles)

  7. Force (wave) Gravity: couples to mass Electromagnetic force: couples to charge Weak force: responsible for radioactive decay Strong force: couples to quarks Carrier (particle) graviton (?) photon W+, W-, Z0 8 gluons The Forces of the Standard Model massless carriers  long ranged massive carriers  short ranged

  8. The particles of the Standard Model Matter particles have half-integer spin (fermions) Force carriers have integer spin (bosons)

  9. Conclusion • We know a lot about the structure of matter! • We know a lot about the forces between matter particles • We know al lot about the theory that describes all of this (the Standard Model)  Great News !

  10. Pie in the Sky: Content of the Universe 5% We know almost everything about almost nothing! Dark Energy Dark Matter SM Matter 25% 70%

  11. What is the dark stuff? Dark Matter is the stuff we know nothing about (but we have some ideas) • Dark Energy is the stuff we have absolutely • no idea about

  12. Conclusion • If we don’t know anything about it, it is boring, and there is nothing to talk about. •  End of lecture!

  13. Alternate Conclusion • If we don’t know anything about it, it is interesting because there is a lot to be discovered, learned, explored,… •  beginning of lecture!

  14. So what do we know? Is it real? • It is real in the sense that it has specific properties • The universe as a whole and its parts behave differently when different amounts of the “dark stuff” is in it • Let’s have a look!

  15. First evidence for dark matter: The missing mass problem • Showed up when measuring rotation curves of galaxies

  16. Properties of Dark Matter • Dark Matter is dark at all wavelengths, not just visible light • We can’t see it (can’t detect it) • Only effect is has: it acts gravitationally like an additional mass • Found in galaxies, galaxies clusters, large scale structure of the universe • Necessary to explain structure formation in the universe at large scales

  17. What is Dark Matter? • More precisely: • What does Dark matter consist of? • Brown dwarfs? • Black dwarfs? • Black holes? • Neutrinos? • Other exotic subatomic particles?

  18. Classification of Dark Matter • Classify the possibilities • Hot Dark Matter • Warm Dark Matter • Cold Dark Matter • Baryonic Dark Matter You could have come up with this, huh?!

  19. Hot Dark Matter • Fast, relativistic matter • Example: neutrino • Pro: • interact very weakly, hard to detect  dark! • Con: • Existing boundaries limit contribution to missing mass • Hot Dark matter cannot explain how galaxies formed • Microwave background (WMAP) indicates that mastter clumped early on • Hot dark matter does not clump (it’s simply too fast)

  20. Baryonic Dark Matter • “Normal” matter • Brown Dwarfs • Dense regions of heavy elements • MACHOs: massive compact halo objects • Big Bang nucleosynthesis limits contribution

  21. Cold Dark Matter • Slow, non-relativistic particles • Most attractive possibility • Large masses (BH, etc) ruled out by grav. lensing data • Major candidates: • Axions • Sterile neutrinos • SIMPs (strongly interacting massive particles) • WIMPs (weakly …), e.g. neutralinos • All of the above are “exotic”, i.e. outside the SM

  22. Alternatives • Maybe missing mass, etc. can be explained by something else? • Incomplete understanding of gravitation • Modified Newtonian Dynamics (MOND) • Nonsymmetric gravity • General relativity

  23. What General Relativity tells us • The more mass there is in the universe, the more the expansion of the cosmos slows down • So the game is: Mass vs. Expansion And we can even calculate who wins!

  24. The “size” of the Universe – depends on time! Expansion wins! It’s a tie! Mass wins! Time

  25. Expansion of the Universe • Either it grows forever • Or it comes to a standstill • Or it falls back and collapses (“Big crunch”) • In any case: Expansion slows down! Surprise of the year 1998 (Birthday of Dark Energy): All wrong! It accelerates!

  26. The silent majority: Dark Energy 70%

  27. Enter: The Cosmological Constant • Usually denoted 0, it represents a uniform pressure which either helps or retards the expansion (depending on its sign) • Physical origin of 0is unclear • Einstein’s biggest blunder – or not ! • Appears to be small but not quite zero! • Particle Physics’ biggest failure

  28. Triple evidence for Dark Energy • Supernova data • Large scale structure of the cosmos • Microwave background

  29. Microwave Background:Signal from the Big Bang • Heat from the Big Bang should still be around, although red-shifted by the subsequent expansion • Predicted to be a blackbody spectrum with a characteristic temperature of 3Kelvin by George Gamow (1948) Cosmic Microwave Background Radiation (CMB)

  30. Discovery of Cosmic Microwave Background Radiation (CMB) • Penzias and Wilson (1964) • Tried to “debug” their horn antenna • Couldn’t get rid of “background noise”  Signal from Big Bang • Very, very isotropic (1 part in 100,000)

  31. CMB: Here’s how it looks like! Peak as expected from 3 Kelvin warm object Shape as expected from black body

  32. Latest Results: WMAP(Wilkinson Microwave Anisotropy Probe) • Measure fluctuations in microwave background • Expect typical size of fluctuation of one degree if universe is flat • Result: Universe is flat !

  33. Experiment and Theory Expect “accoustic peak” at l=200  There it is!

  34. Supernova Data • Type Ia Supernovae are • standard candles • Can calculate distance • from brightness • Can measure redshift • General relativity gives us distance as a • function of redshift for a given universe • Supernovae are further away than expected for any decelerating (“standard”) universe

  35. Supernova Data magnitude Best fit: 75% Dark Energy, 25% Matter redshift

  36. Redshift: Everything is moving away from us! • Measure spectrum of galaxies and compare to laboratory measurement • lines are shifted towards red • This is the Doppler effect: Red-shifted objects are moving away from us

  37. Example: Spectrum of a Quasar Highly redshifted spectrum  the quasar is very far away –and keeps going! Quasar Lab

  38. Large Scale Structure of the Cosmos • Large scale structure of the universe can be explained only by models which include Dark Matter and Dark Energy Experiments: 2dF GRS, SDSS

  39. Properties of Dark Energy • Should be able to explain acceleration of cosmic expansion  acts like a negative pressure • Must not mess up structure formation or nucleosynthesis • Should not dilute as the universe expands  will be different % of content of universe as time goes by

  40. The Pie changes - As time goes by -11.5 -7.5 ¼ size ½ Now 2 size 4 +11.5 +24.5

  41. Why does the Pie change? • Dark energy density stays constant • Matter density falls of like volume • Volume grows, mass stays constant • Big Question: why do we live in an era where the content is rather democratic? Because we are here to observe! (Dangerous answer)

  42. What is Dark Energy? • We have a few ideas what it could be • Unfortunately none of these makes fits our “job description” • Wanted: “Dark Energy Candidate”

  43. Dark Energy Candidates • Global Vacuum Energy • Local Vacuum Energy • Dynamical Dark Energy • Modified Gravity

  44. Threefold Evidence • Three independent measurements agree: • Universe is flat • 30% Matter • 70% dark energy

  45. Measuring Dark Energy Dark energy acts like negative pressure, and is characterized by its equation of state, w = p/ρ  We can measure w!

  46. Conclusion • Need more ideas • No problem! That’s what theorists produce every day • Need more data • Some space missions (Planck, etc) are on the way • LHC probing SUSY will start operation in 2008

  47. The Night Sky in April • Nights are getting shorter! • Spring constellations: Leo, Virgo, Big Dipper, Bootes, Canes Venatici, Coma  lots of galaxies! • Mars & Saturn are visible most of the night

  48. Moon Phases • Today (Waxing Crescent) • 2 / 12 (First Quarter Moon) • 4 / 20 (Full Moon) • 4 / 28 (Last Quarter Moon) • 5 / 5 (New Moon)

  49. Today at Noon • Sun at meridian, i.e. exactly south

  50. 10 PM Typical observing hour, early February Saturn Mars

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