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Post Info TOPIC: Baryon Acoustic Oscillations


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RE: Baryon Acoustic Oscillations
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BOSS Quasars Unveil a New Era in the Expansion History of the Universe

BOSS, the Baryon Oscillation Spectroscopic Survey, is mapping a huge volume of space to measure the role of dark energy in the evolution of the universe. BOSS is the largest program of the third Sloan Digital Sky Survey (SDSS-III) and has just announced the first major result of a new mapping technique, based on the spectra of over 48,000 quasars with redshifts up to 3.5, meaning that light left these active galaxies up to 11.5 billion years in the past.
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The First Public Data Release from BOSS, the Baryon Oscillation Spectroscopic Survey
Led by Berkeley Lab scientists, the Sloan Digital Sky Surveys BOSS is bigger than all other spectroscopic surveys combined for measuring the universes large-scale structure

The Third Sloan Digital Sky Survey (SDSS-III) has issued Data Release 9 (DR9), the first public release of data from the Baryon Oscillation Spectroscopic Survey (BOSS). In this release BOSS, the largest of SDSS-IIIs four surveys, provides spectra for 535,995 newly observed galaxies, 102,100 quasars, and 116,474 stars, plus new information about objects in previous Sloan surveys (SDSS-I and II).
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Title: Measuring Baryon Acoustic Oscillations on 21 cm intensity fluctuations at moderate redshifts
Authors: Xiao-Chun Mao

After reionisation, emission in the 21 cm hyperfine transition provides a direct probe of neutral hydrogen distributed in galaxies. Different from galaxy redshift surveys, observation of baryon acoustic oscillations in the cumulative 21 cm emission may offer an attractive method for constraining dark energy properties at moderate redshifts. Keys to this program are techniques to extract the faint cosmological signal from various contaminants, such as detector noise and continuum foregrounds. In this paper, we investigate the possible systematic and statistical errors in the acoustic scale estimates using ground-based radio interferometers. Based on the simulated 21 cm interferometric measurements, we analyse the performance of a Fourier-space, light-of-sight algorithm in subtracting foregrounds, and further study the observing strategy as a function of instrumental configurations. Measurement uncertainties are presented from a suite of simulations with a variety of parameters, in order to have an estimate of what behaviours will be accessible in the future generation of hydrogen surveys. We find that 10 separate interferometers, each of which contains ~ 300 dishes, observes an independent patch of the sky and produces an instantaneous field-of-view of ~ 100 deg², can be used to make a significant detection of acoustic features over a period of a few years. Compared to optical surveys, the broad bandwidth, wide field-of-view and multi-beam observation are all unprecedented capabilities of low-frequency radio experiments.

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Survey tunes in to dark energy        
        
David Schlegel's tool for exploring dark energy, one of nature's biggest mysteries, is deceptively simple. It is an aluminium plate the size of a manhole cover - or rather, 2,200 of them, each with a specific pattern of holes drilled to match the arrangement of galaxies in a particular section of the sky. Every plate is used once, for an hour, at the prime focus of the 2.5-metre telescope at Apache Point Observatory in New Mexico. When the telescope is pointing at the correct spot, light from each galaxy streams through its corresponding hole. The light is then broken up into its constituent wavelengths and used to clock how fast each galaxy is being carried away from us by the relentless expansion of space.
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RE: Baryon Acoustic Oscillations
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If dark energy is real and not a flaw in our understanding of gravity, then the best way to understand it is by studying the expansion history of the Universe, according to Martin White, an astrophysicist at Berkeley Lab and a professor of astronomy and physics at UC Berkeley.

"One way is with 'standard candles' - that is, supernovae. Another way is with a 'standard ruler'" - Martin White

Baryon acoustic oscillation, or BAO, may provide the ideal standard ruler. The scale is calibrated by the cosmic microwave background (CMB), which recorded the state of the Universe roughly 400,000 years after the Big Bang. At this early epoch, the standard ruler for BAO is detectable as periodic, minute variations in the temperature of the CMB. More recently, the ruler's scale is evident in the regular clustering of galaxies and intergalactic gas, and is also present in the clumping of invisible dark matter. These oscillations can be measured both across the sky and in the line of sight (back in time).

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Énergie noire : premières données du projet Boss
Les premières données du sondage Boss (Baryon oscillation spectroscopic survey) ont été obtenues dans la nuit du 14 au 15 septembre. Cette expérience, dédiée à la recherche des oscillations de baryons, ouvre une nouvelle ère de recherche sur l'énergie noire et l'évolution de l'Univers. Elle implique notamment des équipes de l'INSU-CNRS, de l'IN2P3/CNRS et du CEA.


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BOSS, the Baryon Oscillation Spectroscopic Survey, is the most ambitious attempt yet to map the expansion history of the Universe using the technique known as baryon acoustic oscillation (BAO). A part of the Sloan Digital Sky Survey III (SDSS-III), BOSS achieved "first light" on the night of September 14-15, when it acquired data with an upgraded spectrographic system across the entire focal plane of the Sloan Foundation 2.5-meter telescope at Apache Point Observatory in New Mexico.
BOSS is the largest of four surveys in SDSS-III, with 160 participants from among SDSS-III's 350 scientists and 42 institutions. BOSS's principal investigator is David Schlegel, its survey scientist is Martin White, and its instrument scientist is Natalie Roe; all three are with the Physics Division of the U.S. Department of Energy's Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory. Daniel Eisenstein of the University of Arizona is the director of SDSS-III.

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Acoustic oscillations arise from the competition between gravitational attraction and gas pressure in the primordial plasma. These oscillations leave their imprint on structures at every epoch of the evolution of the Universe, providing a robust standard ruler from which the expansion history of the Universe can be inferred. Baryon acoustic oscillations were recently discovered by the SDSS, a spectacular confirmation of the current model of cosmology. The oscillations leave their imprint on very large scales, ~100 Mpc/h (the distance between two galaxies is ~1 Mpc/h). This poses a tremendous challenge to observations, as surveys must cover large volumes of the Universe. The very large scale of baryon oscillations also confers certain advantages. Structure formation on these scales is rather well understood, and galaxy formation details do not hinder the extraction of accurate results. As part of this project we will investigate baryon acoustic oscillations as precision probe of dark energy.

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