scholarly journals Perturbative treatment of the luminosity distance

2018 ◽  
Vol 98 (6) ◽  
Author(s):  
Dimitar Ivanov ◽  
Stefano Liberati ◽  
Matteo Viel ◽  
Matt Visser
1988 ◽  
Vol 38 (3) ◽  
pp. 1488-1489 ◽  
Author(s):  
Sohail A. Khan ◽  
William P. Beres

2018 ◽  
Vol 611 ◽  
pp. A50 ◽  
Author(s):  
Konstantinos Migkas ◽  
Thomas H. Reiprich

We introduce a new test to study the cosmological principle with galaxy clusters. Galaxy clusters exhibit a tight correlation between the luminosity and temperature of the X-ray-emitting intracluster medium. While the luminosity measurement depends on cosmological parameters through the luminosity distance, the temperature determination is cosmology-independent. We exploit this property to test the isotropy of the luminosity distance over the full extragalactic sky, through the normalization a of the LX–T scaling relation and the cosmological parameters Ωm and H0. To this end, we use two almost independent galaxy cluster samples: the ASCA Cluster Catalog (ACC) and the XMM Cluster Survey (XCS-DR1). Interestingly enough, these two samples appear to have the same pattern for a with respect to the Galactic longitude. More specifically, we identify one sky region within l ~ (−15°, 90°) (Group A) that shares very different best-fit values for the normalization of the LX–T relation for both ACC and XCS-DR1 samples. We use the Bootstrap and Jackknife methods to assess the statistical significance of these results. We find the deviation of Group A, compared to the rest of the sky in terms of a, to be ~2.7σ for ACC and ~3.1σ for XCS-DR1. This tension is not significantly relieved after excluding possible outliers and is not attributed to different redshift (z), temperature (T), or distributions of observable uncertainties. Moreover, a redshift conversion to the cosmic microwave background (CMB) frame does not have an important impact on our results. Using also the HIFLUGCS sample, we show that a possible excess of cool-core clusters in this region, is not able to explain the obtained deviations. Furthermore, we tested for a dependence of the results on supercluster environment, where the fraction of disturbed clusters might be enhanced, possibly affecting the LX–T relation. We indeed find a trend in the XCS-DR1 sample for supercluster members to be underluminous compared to field clusters. However, the fraction of supercluster members is similar in the different sky regions, so this cannot explain the observed differences, either. Constraining Ωm and H0 via the redshift evolution of LX–T and the luminosity distance via the flux–luminosity conversion, we obtain approximately the same deviation amplitudes as for a. It is interesting that the general observed behavior of Ωm for the sky regions that coincide with the CMB dipole is similar to what was found with other cosmological probes such as supernovae Ia. The reason for this behavior remains to be identified.


2011 ◽  
Vol 2011 (11) ◽  
pp. 047-047 ◽  
Author(s):  
Nan-Nan Yue ◽  
De-Zi Liu ◽  
Xiao-Xing Pei ◽  
Fang-Fang Zhu ◽  
Tong-Jie Zhang ◽  
...  

Author(s):  
Anirudh Pradhan ◽  
Priyanka Garg ◽  
Archana Dixit

In the present paper, we have generalized the behaviors of {\color{blue}transit-decelerating to accelerating} FRW cosmological model in f (R, T) gravity theory, where R, T are Ricci scalar and trace of energy-momentum tensor respectively. The solution of the corresponding field equations is obtained by assuming a linear function of the Hubble parameter H, i.e., q = c<sub>1</sub> + c<sub>2</sub>H which gives a time-dependent DP (deceleration parameter) q(t)=-1+\frac{c_2}{\sqrt{2c_2 t +c_3}}, where c<sub>3</sub> and c<sub>2</sub> are arbitrary integrating constants [Tiwari et al., Eur. Phys. J. Plus: 131, 447 (2016); 132, 126 (2017)]. There are two scenarios in which we explain the particular form of scale factor thus obtained  (i) By using the recent constraints from OHD and JLA data which shows a cosmic deceleration to acceleration and (ii) By using new constraints from supernovae type la union data which shows accelerating expansion universe (q<0) throughout the evolution. We have observed that the EoS parameter, energy density parameters, and important cosmological planes yield the results compatible with the modern observational data. For the derived models, we have calculated various physical parameters as Luminosity distance, Distance modulus, and Apparent magnitude versus redshift for both supporting current observations.


2020 ◽  
Vol 08 (04) ◽  
pp. 698-709
Author(s):  
Mohammed Janati Idrissi ◽  
Abdelaziz Fedoul ◽  
Salaheddine Sayouri

2020 ◽  
Vol 641 ◽  
pp. A35
Author(s):  
R. Siebenmorgen ◽  
J. Krełowski ◽  
J. Smoker ◽  
G. Galazutdinov ◽  
S. Bagnulo

The precise characteristics of clouds and the nature of dust in the diffuse interstellar medium can only be extracted by inspecting the rare cases of single-cloud sightlines. In our nomenclature such objects are identified by interstellar lines, such as K I, that show at a resolving power of λ∕Δλ ~ 75 000 one dominating Doppler component that accounts for more than half of the observed column density. We searched for such sightlines using high-resolution spectroscopy towards reddened OB stars for which far-UV extinction curves are known. We compiled a sample of 186 spectra, 100 of which were obtained specifically for this project with UVES. In our sample we identified 65 single-cloud sightlines, about half of which were previously unknown. We used the CH/CH+ line ratio of our targets to establish whether the sightlines are dominated by warm or cold clouds. We found that CN is detected in all cold (CH/CH+ > 1) clouds, but is frequently absent in warm clouds. We inspected the WISE (3−22 μm) observed emission morphology around our sightlines and excluded a circumstellar nature for the observed dust extinction. We found that most sightlines are dominated by cold clouds that are located far away from the heating source. For 132 stars, we derived the spectral type and the associated spectral type-luminosity distance. We also applied the interstellar Ca II distance scale, and compared these two distance estimates with Gaia parallaxes. These distance estimates scatter by ~40%. By comparing spectral type-luminosity distances with those of Gaia, we detected a hidden dust component that amounts to a few mag of extinction for eight sightlines. This dark dust is populated by ≳ 1 μm large grains and predominately appears in the field of the cold interstellar medium.


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