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

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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. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Starry Monday at Otterbein

Starry Monday at Otterbein

Astronomy Lecture Series-every first Monday of the month-

April 7, 2008

Dr. Uwe Trittmann

Welcome to

Page 2: Starry Monday at Otterbein

Today’s Topics

• Dark Matter and Dark Energy – The Dark Side of the Universe

• The Night Sky in April

Page 3: Starry Monday at Otterbein

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?

Page 4: Starry Monday at Otterbein

“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

Page 5: Starry Monday at Otterbein

The Structure of MatterAtom: Nucleus and Electrons

Nucleus: Protons and Neutrons (Nucleons)

Nucleon: 3 Quarks

| 10-10m |

| 10-14m ||10-15m|

Page 6: Starry Monday at Otterbein

Elementary ParticlesAll 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)

Page 7: Starry Monday at Otterbein

The Forces of the Standard Model 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

massless carriers long ranged

massive carriers short ranged

Page 8: Starry Monday at Otterbein

The particles of the Standard Model

Force carriers have integer spin (bosons)

Matter particles have half-integer spin(fermions)

Page 9: Starry Monday at Otterbein

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 !

Page 10: Starry Monday at Otterbein

Pie in the Sky: Content of the Universe

We know almost everything about almost nothing!

1

2

3

25%

5%

70%

Dark EnergyDark MatterSM MatterSM Matter

Page 11: Starry Monday at Otterbein

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

Page 12: Starry Monday at Otterbein

Conclusion

• If we don’t know anything about it, it is boring, and there is nothing to talk about.

End of lecture!

Page 13: Starry Monday at Otterbein

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!

Page 14: Starry Monday at Otterbein

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!

Page 15: Starry Monday at Otterbein

First evidence for dark matter: The missing mass problem

• Showed up when measuring rotation curves of galaxies

Page 16: Starry Monday at Otterbein

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

Page 17: Starry Monday at Otterbein

What is Dark Matter?

• More precisely: • What does Dark matter consist of?

– Brown dwarfs?– Black dwarfs?– Black holes?– Neutrinos?– Other exotic subatomic particles?

Page 18: Starry Monday at Otterbein

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?!

Page 19: Starry Monday at Otterbein

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)

Page 20: Starry Monday at Otterbein

Baryonic Dark Matter

• “Normal” matter– Brown Dwarfs– Dense regions of heavy elements– MACHOs: massive compact halo objects

• Big Bang nucleosynthesis limits contribution

Page 21: Starry Monday at Otterbein

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

Page 22: Starry Monday at Otterbein

Alternatives

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

Page 23: Starry Monday at Otterbein

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!

Page 24: Starry Monday at Otterbein

The “size” of the Universe – depends on time!

Expansion wins!

It’s a tie!

Mass wins!

Time

Page 25: Starry Monday at Otterbein

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!

Page 26: Starry Monday at Otterbein

The silent majority: Dark Energy

                                                                                                 

                                                                 

1

2

3

70%

Page 27: Starry Monday at Otterbein

Enter: The Cosmological Constant

• Physical origin of 0 is unclear

• Einstein’s biggest blunder – or not !

• Appears to be small but not quite zero!

• Particle Physics’ biggest failure

• Usually denoted 0, it represents a uniform pressure which either helps or retards the expansion (depending on its sign)

Page 28: Starry Monday at Otterbein

Triple evidence for Dark Energy

• Supernova data• Large scale structure

of the cosmos• Microwave

background

                                           

                                                   

Page 29: Starry Monday at Otterbein

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)

Page 30: Starry Monday at Otterbein

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)

Page 31: Starry Monday at Otterbein

CMB: Here’s how it looks like!Peak as expected from 3 Kelvin warm object

Shape as expected from black body

Page 32: Starry Monday at Otterbein

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 !

Page 33: Starry Monday at Otterbein

Experiment and Theory

Expect “accoustic peak” at l=200

There it is!

Page 34: Starry Monday at Otterbein

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 universeSupernovae are further away than expected for any decelerating (“standard”) universe

Page 35: Starry Monday at Otterbein

Supernova Data

redshift

magnitudeBest fit: 75% Dark Energy, 25% Matter

Page 36: Starry Monday at Otterbein

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

Page 37: Starry Monday at Otterbein

Example: Spectrum of a QuasarHighly redshifted spectrum the quasar is very far away –and keeps going!

Quasar

Lab

Page 38: Starry Monday at Otterbein

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

Page 39: Starry Monday at Otterbein

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

Page 40: Starry Monday at Otterbein

The Pie changes - As time goes by

1

2

3

1

2

3

1

2

3

1

2

31

2

3

-11.5

+24.5+11.5

Now

-7.5¼ size ½

2 size 4

Page 41: Starry Monday at Otterbein

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)

Page 42: Starry Monday at Otterbein

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”

Page 43: Starry Monday at Otterbein

Dark Energy Candidates

• Global Vacuum Energy

• Local Vacuum Energy

• Dynamical Dark Energy

• Modified Gravity

Page 44: Starry Monday at Otterbein

Threefold Evidence

Three independent measurements agree:

•Universe is flat•30% Matter•70% dark energy

Page 45: Starry Monday at Otterbein

Measuring Dark Energy

Dark energy acts like negative pressure, and is characterized by its equation of state, w = p/ρ

We can measure w!

Page 46: Starry Monday at Otterbein

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

Page 47: Starry Monday at Otterbein

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

Page 48: Starry Monday at Otterbein

Moon Phases• Today (Waxing Crescent)

• 2 / 12 (First Quarter Moon)

• 4 / 20 (Full Moon)

• 4 / 28 (Last Quarter Moon)

• 5 / 5 (New Moon)

Page 49: Starry Monday at Otterbein

Today at

Noon

• Sun at meridian, i.e. exactly south

Page 50: Starry Monday at Otterbein

10 PM

Typical observing hour, early February

Saturn Mars

Page 51: Starry Monday at Otterbein

Star Maps

Celestial North Pole – everything turns around this point

Zenith – the point right above you & the middle of the map

40º90º

Page 52: Starry Monday at Otterbein

Due North

• Big Dipper points to the north pole

Page 53: Starry Monday at Otterbein

West

Perseus, Auriga &

Taurus

with Plejades and the Double Cluster

Page 54: Starry Monday at Otterbein

West

• Orion• Canis

Major & Minor

• Beautiful open star clusters

• Orion Nebula M42

Page 55: Starry Monday at Otterbein

South

• Spring constellations:– Leo– Hydra

• M44 Beehive (open star cluster)

• Saturn

Page 56: Starry Monday at Otterbein

East

• Virgo & Coma

Page 57: Starry Monday at Otterbein

High up in the East

• Big Dipper

• Bootes

Page 58: Starry Monday at Otterbein

Mark your Calendars!

• Next Starry Monday: May 5, 2008, 7 pm (this is a Monday )

• Observing at Prairie Oaks Metro Park: – Friday, May 9, 9:00 pm

• Web pages:– http://www.otterbein.edu/dept/PHYS/weitkamp.asp

(Obs.)– http://www.otterbein.edu/dept/PHYS/ (Physics Dept.)

Page 59: Starry Monday at Otterbein

Mark your Calendars II

• Physics Coffee is every Monday, 3:00 pm • Open to the public, everyone welcome!• Location: across the hall, Science 244• Free coffee, cookies, etc.

Page 60: Starry Monday at Otterbein

The Mass of the Galaxy

• Can be determined using Kepler’s 3rd Law– Solar System: the orbital velocities of planets determined by

mass of Sun– Galaxy: orbital velocities of stars are determined by total

mass of the galaxy contained within that star’s orbit

• Two key results:– large mass contained in a very small volume at center of our

Galaxy– Much of the mass of the Galaxy is not observed

• consists neither of stars, nor of gas or dust • extends far beyond visible part of our galaxy (“dark

halo”)

Page 61: Starry Monday at Otterbein

Aside: Standard Cosmology

• Based on Einstein’s theory of Gravity, aka General Relativity

• Assumes isotropic, homogeneous universe• This “smeared out mass” property is

approximately valid if we average over large distances in the universe

Page 62: Starry Monday at Otterbein

General Relativity ?! That’s easy!

(Actually, it took Prof. Einstein 10 years to come up with that!)

Rμν -1/2 gμν R = 8πG/c4 Tμν

OK, fine, but what does that mean?

Page 63: Starry Monday at Otterbein

The Idea behind General Relativity

– In modern physics, we view space and time as a whole, we call it four-dimensional space-time.

– Space-time is warped by the presence of masses like the sun, so “Mass tells space how to bend”

– Objects (like planets) travel in “straight” lines through this curved space (we see this as orbits), so “Space tells matter how to move”

Page 64: Starry Monday at Otterbein

Still too complicated?

• Here is a picture: Sun Planet’s orbit

Page 65: Starry Monday at Otterbein

Effects of General Relativity• Bending of starlight by the Sun's gravitational

field (and other gravitational lensing effects)

Page 66: Starry Monday at Otterbein

The Universe expands!

• Where was the origin of the expansion? Everywhere!• Every galaxy sees the others receding from

it – there is no center

Page 67: Starry Monday at Otterbein

Big Bang

• The universe expands now, so looking

back in time it actually shrinks until…?

Big Bang model: The universe is born out of a hot dense medium

13.7 billion years ago.

Page 68: Starry Monday at Otterbein

The Fate of the Universe – determined by a single number!

• Critical density is the density required to just barely stop the expansion

• We’ll use 0 = actual density/critical density: 0 = 1 means it’s a tie 0 > 1 means the universe will recollapse (Big Crunch)

Mass wins! 0 < 1 means gravity not strong enough to halt the expansion

Expansion wins!

• And the number is: 0 = 1 (probably…)

Page 69: Starry Monday at Otterbein

The Shape of the Universe

• In the basic scenario there is a simple relation between the density and the shape of space-time:

Density Curvature 2-D example Universe Time & Space

0>1 positive sphere closed, bound finite

0=1 zero (flat) plane open, marginal infinite

0<1 negative saddle open, unbound infinite

    

                                             

Page 70: Starry Monday at Otterbein

Maybe pigeons?• Proposed error: pigeon

crap in antenna• Real reason: a signal

from the Big Bang

Pigeon trap

Horn antenna

Page 71: Starry Monday at Otterbein

Global Vacuum Energy

• Cosmological constant– Constant in space and time– Same across the universe

• Pro:– Could be explainable from first principles

• Con:– No known explanation yet

Page 72: Starry Monday at Otterbein

Local Vacuum Energy

• Constant in the observable universe, but different in very distant parts of cosmos

• Pro– Maybe explains why cosmological const. is so

small “here”• Con

– Requires different domains

Page 73: Starry Monday at Otterbein

Dynamical Dark Energy

• Quintessence– Slowly varying energy source

• Pro– Testable– Can gradually go to zero energy

• Con– Has not been detected

Page 74: Starry Monday at Otterbein

Modified Gravity

• Modification of general relativity on large scales

• Pro– Does not need “dark energy”

• Con– Hard to modify and still explain existing data