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Cosmological constraints are usually derived under the assumption of a $6$ parameters $Lambda$-CDM theoretical framework or simple one-parameter extensions. In this paper we present, for the first time, cosmological constraints in a significantly ext ended scenario, varying up to $12$ cosmological parameters simultaneously, including the sum of neutrino masses, the neutrino effective number, the dark energy equation of state, the gravitational waves background and the running of the spectral index of primordial perturbations. Using the latest Planck 2015 data release (with polarization) we found no significant indication for extensions to the standard $Lambda$-CDM scenario, with the notable exception of the angular power spectrum lensing amplitude, $A_{rm lens}$ that is larger than the expected value at more than two standard deviations even when combining the Planck data with BAO and supernovae type Ia external datasets. In our extended cosmological framework, we find that a combined Planck+BAO analysis constrains the value of the r.m.s. density fluctuation parameter to $sigma_8=0.781_{-0.063}^{+0.065}$ at $95 %$ c.l., helping to relieve the possible tensions with the CFHTlenS cosmic shear survey. We also find a lower value for the reionization optical depth $tau=0.058_{-0.043}^{+0.040}$ at $95$ % c.l. respect to the one derived under the assumption of $Lambda$-CDM. The scalar spectral index $n_S$ is now compatible with a Harrison-Zeldovich spectrum to within $2.5$ standard deviations. Combining the Planck dataset with the HST prior on the Hubble constant provides a value for the equation of state $w < -1$ at more than two standard deviations while the neutrino effective number is fully compatible with the expectations of the standard three neutrino framework.
If the dark matter (DM) were composed of axions, then structure formation in the Universe would be suppressed below the axion Jeans scale. Using an analytic model for the halo mass function of a mixed DM model with axions and cold dark matter, combin ed with the abundance-matching technique, we construct the UV-luminosity function. Axions suppress high-$z$ galaxy formation and the UV-luminosity function is truncated at a faintest limiting magnitude. From the UV-luminosity function, we predict the reionization history of the universe and find that axion DM causes reionization to occur at lower redshift. We search for evidence of axions using the Hubble Ultra Deep Field UV-luminosity function in the redshift range $z=6$-$10$, and the optical depth to reionization, $tau$, as measured from cosmic microwave background polarization. All probes we consider consistently exclude $m_alesssim 10^{-23}text{ eV}$ from contributing more than half of the DM, with our strongest constraint ruling this model out at more than $8sigma$ significance. In conservative models of reionization a dominant component of DM with $m_a=10^{-22}text{ eV}$ is in $3sigma$ tension with the measured value of $tau$, putting pressure on an axion solution to the cusp-core problem. Tension is reduced to $2sigma$ for the axion contributing only half of the DM. A future measurement of the UV-luminosity function in the range $z=10$-$13$ by JWST would provide further evidence for or against $m_a=10^{-22}text{ eV}$. Probing still higher masses of $m_a=10^{-21}text{ eV}$ will be possible using future measurements of the kinetic Sunyaev-Zeldovich effect by Advanced ACTPol to constrain the time and duration of reionization.
We show that the ratio of galaxies specific star formation rates (SSFRs) to their host halos specific mass accretion rates (SMARs) strongly constrains how the galaxies stellar masses, specific star formation rates, and host halo masses evolve over co smic time. This evolutionary constraint provides a simple way to probe z>8 galaxy populations without direct observations. Tests of the method with galaxy properties at z=4 successfully reproduce the known evolution of the stellar mass--halo mass (SMHM) relation, galaxy SSFRs, and the cosmic star formation rate (CSFR) for 5<z<8. We then predict the continued evolution of these properties for 8<z<15. In contrast to the non-evolution in the SMHM relation at z<4, the median galaxy mass at fixed halo mass increases strongly at z>4. We show that this result is closely linked to the flattening in galaxy SSFRs at z>2 compared to halo specific mass accretion rates; we expect that average galaxy SSFRs at fixed stellar mass will continue their mild evolution to z~15. The expected CSFR shows no breaks or features at z>8.5; this constrains both reionization and the possibility of a steep falloff in the CSFR at z=9-10. Finally, we make predictions for stellar mass and luminosity functions for the James Webb Space Telescope (JWST), which should be able to observe one galaxy with M* > ~10^8 Msun per 10^3 Mpc^3 at z=9.6 and one such galaxy per 10^4 Mpc^3 at z=15.
Short-lived intermittent phases of super-critical (super-Eddington) growth, coupled with star formation via positive feedback, may account for early growth of massive black holes (MBH) and coevolution with their host spheroids. We estimate the possib le growth rates and duty cycles of these episodes, both assuming slim accretion disk solutions, and adopting the results of recent numerical simulations. The angular momentum of gas joining the accretion disk determines the length of the accretion episodes, and the final mass a MBH can reach. The latter can be related to the gas velocity dispersion, and in galaxies with low-angular momentum gas the MBH can get to a higher mass. When the host galaxy is able to sustain inflow rates at 1-100 msunyr, replenishing and circulation lead to a sequence of short (~1e4-1e7 years), heavily obscured accretion episodes that increase the growth rates, with respect to an Eddington-limited case, by several orders of magnitude. Our model predicts that the ratio of MBH accretion rate to star formation rate is 1e2 or higher, leading, at early epochs, to a ratio of MBH to stellar mass higher than the canonical value of ~1e-3, in agreement with current observations. Our model makes specific predictions that long-lived super-critical accretion occurs only in galaxies with copious low-angular momentum gas, and in this case the MBH is more massive at fixed velocity dispersion.
Observations of diffuse Galactic gamma ray emission (DGE) by the Fermi Large Area Telescope (LAT) allow a detailed study of cosmic rays and the interstellar medium. However, diffuse emission models of the inner Galaxy underpredict the Fermi-LAT data at energies above a few GeV and hint at possible non-astrophysical sources including dark matter (DM) annihilations or decays. We present a study of the possible emission components from DM using the high-resolution Via Lactea II N-body simulation of a Milky Way-sized DM halo. We generate full-sky maps of DM annihilation and decay signals that include modeling of the adiabatic contraction of the host density profile, Sommerfeld enhanced DM annihilations, $p$-wave annihilations, and decaying DM. We compare our results with the DGE models produced by the Fermi-LAT team over different sky regions, including the Galactic center, high Galactic latitudes, and the Galactic anti-center. This work provides possible templates to fit the observational data that includes the contribution of the subhalo population to DM gamma-ray emission, with the significance depending on the annihilation/decay channels and the Galactic regions being considered.
126 - Hiroyuki Tashiro , Joseph Silk , 2013
Measuring spectral distortions of the cosmic microwave background (CMB) is attracting considerable attention as a probe of high energy particle physics in the cosmological context, since PIXIE and PRISM have recently been proposed. In this paper, CMB distortions due to resonant
The hypervelocity OB stars in the Milky Way Galaxy were ejected from the central regions some 10-100 million years ago. We argue that these stars, {as well as many more abundant bound OB stars in the innermost few parsecs,} were generated by the inte ractions of an AGN jet from the central black hole with a dense molecular cloud. Considerations of the associated energy and momentum injection have broader implications for the possible origin of the Fermi bubbles and for the enrichment of the intergalactic medium.
Primordial non-Gaussianity introduces a scale-dependent variation in the clustering of density peaks corresponding to rare objects. This variation, parametrized by the bias, is investigated on scales where a linear perturbation theory is sufficiently accurate. The bias is obtained directly in real space by comparing the one- and two-point probability distributions of density fluctuations. We show that these distributions can be reconstructed using a bivariate Edgeworth series, presented here up to an arbitrarily high order. The Edgeworth formalism is shown to be well-suited for local cubic-order non-Gaussianity parametrized by g_NL. We show that a strong scale-dependence in the bias can be produced by g_NL of order 10,000, consistent with CMB constraints. On correlation length of ~100 Mpc, current constraints on g_NL still allow the bias for the most massive clusters to be enhanced by 20-30% of the Gaussian value. We further examine the bias as a function of mass scale, and also explore the relationship between the clustering and the abundance of massive clusters in the presence of g_NL. We explain why the Edgeworth formalism, though technically challenging, is a very powerful technique for constraining high-order non-Gaussianity with large-scale structures.
Bursts of particle production during inflation provide a well-motivated mechanism for creating bump like features in the primordial power spectrum. Current data constrains these features to be less than about 5% the size of the featureless primordial power spectrum at wavenumbers of about 0.1 h Mpc^{-1}. We forecast that the Planck cosmic microwave background experiment will be able to strengthen this constraint to the 0.5% level. We also predict that adding data from a square kilometer array (SKA) galaxy redshift survey would improve the constraint to about the 0.1% level. For features at larger wave-numbers, Planck will be limited by Silk damping and foregrounds. While, SKA will be limited by non-linear effects. We forecast for a Cosmic Inflation Probe (CIP) galaxy redshift survey, similar constraints can be achieved up to about a wavenumber of 1 h Mpc^{-1}.
We update our earlier calculations of gamma ray and radio observational constraints on annihilations of dark matter particles lighter than 10 GeV. We predict the synchrotron spectrum as well as the morphology of the radio emission associated with lig ht decaying and annihilating dark matter candidates in both the Coma cluster and the Galactic Centre. Our new results basically confirm our previous findings: synchrotron emission in the very inner part of the Milky Way constrains or even excludes dark matter candidates if the magnetic field is larger than 50 micro Gauss. In fact, our results suggest that light annihilating candidates must have a S-wave suppressed pair annihilation cross section into electrons (or the branching ratio into electron positron must be small). If dark matter is decaying, it must have a life time that is larger than t = 3. 10^{25} s. Therefore, radio emission should always be considered when one proposes a light dark matter candidate.
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