scholarly journals Geodesics and bending of light around a BTZ black hole surrounded by quintessential matter

Author(s):  
Shubham Kala ◽  
Hemwati Nandan ◽  
Prateek Sharma ◽  
Maye Elmardi

Various observations from cosmic microwave background radiation (CMBR), type Ia supernova and baryon acoustic oscillations (BAO) are strongly suggestive of an accelerated expansion of the universe which can be explained by the presence of mysterious energy known as dark energy. The quintessential matter coupled with gravity minimally is considered one of the possible candidates to represent the presence of such dark energy in our universe. In view of this scenario, we study the geodesic of massless particles as well as massive particles around a (2 + 1)-dimensional BTZ black hole (BH) spacetime surrounded by the quintessence. The effect of parameters involved in the deflection of light by such a BH spacetime is investigated in detail. The results obtained are then compared with a usual non-rotating BTZ BH spacetime.

2012 ◽  
Vol 496 ◽  
pp. 523-526
Author(s):  
Jian Guo Lu ◽  
Ming Hu

Recently the observations on the type Ia supernova has showed the accelerated expansion of the universe which can be used to illustrate by the “dark energy”. In order to understand the accelerated expansion of the universe and the dark energy, people study them based on two aspects: theoretical mechanism and cosmology observation restrictions. The simplest and the most frequently used models of the dark energy are the vacuum energy, cosmic constant model and quintessence model etc. The measurement of the universe can be used to identify the properties of the dark energy. The anisotropy of the type Ia supernova and cosmic microwave background radiation are the methods which commonly used to detect the dark energy, other methods are weak lensing, X ray gas group, high red shift gamma-ray burst and so on


2009 ◽  
Vol 24 (05) ◽  
pp. 369-376 ◽  
Author(s):  
LIXIN XU ◽  
JIANBO LU

In this paper, a parametrized deceleration parameter q(a) = q0+q1(1-a) is constrained by using the current cosmic observational data from type Ia Supernova (Sne Ia) and Cosmic Microwave Background Radiation (CMB). When the CMB dataset is added as a strong constraint, it is found that the 1σ error is largely reduced. The values of transition redshift zT from decelerated expansion to accelerated expansion and current deceleration parameter q0 are larger than that obtained from the case where Sne Ia dataset is used alone. With comparison to the case of Sne Ia 182 dataset used,15 it is found that the value of transition redshift is smaller than that in Sne 192 dataset case. This is the so-called dataset dependence.


2005 ◽  
Vol 20 (14) ◽  
pp. 2931-2942
Author(s):  
JOSEPH FOWLER

The latest cosmological data point to a model of the universe that is self-consistent but deeply weird. It seems that most matter in our universe is non-baryonic and hidden from direct view. Meanwhile, a repulsive "dark energy" causes the expansion of the universe to proceed at an accelerating rate. Sources of current data include studies of the distribution of matter in the universe, the anisotropies of the cosmic microwave background radiation, and the Hubble expansion law as probed by distant supernovae. In the near future, we can hope that measurements like these will begin to illuminate the nature of dark energy, starting with the question of whether it behaves like a cosmological constant or shows a more complicated evolution.


2011 ◽  
Vol 20 (06) ◽  
pp. 1153-1166 ◽  
Author(s):  
L. CAMPANELLI ◽  
P. CEA ◽  
G. L. FOGLI ◽  
L. TEDESCO

A cosmological model with anisotropic dark energy is analyzed. The amount of deviation from isotropy of the equation of state of dark energy, the skewness δ, generates an anisotropization of the large-scale geometry of the Universe, quantifiable by means of the actual shear Σ0. Requiring that the level of cosmic anisotropization at the time of decoupling be such that we can solve the "quadrupole problem" of cosmic microwave background radiation, we find that |δ| ~ 10-4 and |Σ_0| ~10-5, compatible with existing limits derived from the magnitude redshift data on Type Ia supernovae.


2018 ◽  
Vol 17 (1) ◽  
pp. 25-32
Author(s):  
Louise Rebecca ◽  
C Sivaram ◽  
Kenath Arun

One of the unresolved problems in cosmology is that the measured mass density of the universe has revealed a value that was about 30% of the critical density. Since the universe is very nearly spatially flat, as is indicated by measurements of the cosmic microwave background, about 70% of the energy density of the universe was left unaccounted for. Another observation seems to be connected to this mystery. Generally one would expect the rate of expansion to slow down once the universe started expanding. The measurements of Type Ia supernovae have revealed that the expansion of the universe is actually accelerating. This accelerated expansion is attributed to the so-called dark energy (DE).Here we give a brief overview on the observational basis for DE hypothesis and how cosmological constant, initially proposed by Einstein to obtain a static universe, can play the role of dark energy.


2020 ◽  
Vol 80 (12) ◽  
Author(s):  
Debabrata Adak

AbstractWe study the observational aspects of Einstein Yang Mills Higgs dark energy model and constrain the parameters space from the latest observational data from type Ia supernovae, observational Hubble data, baryon acoustic oscillation data and cosmic microwave background radiation shift parameter data. It is found from the analysis of data that the Higgs field in presence of gauge fields can successfully describe the present accelerated expansion of the universe consistent with the astrophysical observations.


2020 ◽  
Vol 494 (2) ◽  
pp. 2183-2190
Author(s):  
Stéphane Fay

ABSTRACT We examine the possibility that Universe expansion be made of some Λ-cold dark matter (ΛCDM) expansions repeating periodically, separated by some inflation- and radiation-dominated phases. This so-called ΛCDM periodic cosmology is motivated by the possibility that inflation and the present phase of accelerated expansion be due to the same dark energy. Then, in a phase space showing the variation of matter density parameter Ωm with respect to this of the radiation Ωr, the curve Ωm(Ωr) looks like a closed trajectory that Universe could run through forever. In this case, the end of the expansion acceleration of the ΛCDM phase is the beginning of a new inflation phase. We show that such a scenario implies the coupling of matter and/or radiation to dark energy. We consider the simplest of these ΛCDM periodic models i.e. a vacuum energy coupled to radiation. From matter domination phase to today, it behaves like a ΛCDM model, then followed by an inflation phase. But a sudden and fast decay of the dark energy into radiation periodically ends the expansion acceleration. This leads to a radiation-dominated Universe preceding a new ΛCDM type expansion. The model is constrained with Markov Chain Monte Carlo simulations using supernovae, Hubble expansion, Baryon Acoustic Oscillations (BAO), and cosmic microwave background data and fits the data as well as the ΛCDM one.


2017 ◽  
Vol 26 (13) ◽  
pp. 1730023 ◽  
Author(s):  
G. K. Chakravarty ◽  
S. Mohanty ◽  
G. Lambiase

Cosmological and astrophysical observations lead to the emerging picture of a universe that is spatially flat and presently undertaking an accelerated expansion. The observations supporting this picture come from a range of measurements encompassing estimates of galaxy cluster masses, the Hubble diagram derived from type-Ia supernovae observations, the measurements of Cosmic Microwave Background radiation anisotropies, etc. The present accelerated expansion of the universe can be explained by admitting the existence of a cosmic fluid, with negative pressure. In the simplest scenario, this unknown component of the universe, the Dark Energy, is represented by the cosmological constant ([Formula: see text]), and accounts for about 70% of the global energy budget of the universe. The remaining 30% consist of a small fraction of baryons (4%) with the rest being Cold Dark Matter (CDM). The Lambda Cold Dark Matter ([Formula: see text]CDM) model, i.e. General Relativity with cosmological constant, is in good agreement with observations. It can be assumed as the first step towards a new standard cosmological model. However, despite the satisfying agreement with observations, the [Formula: see text]CDM model presents lack of congruence and shortcomings and therefore theories beyond Einstein’s General Relativity are called for. Many extensions of Einstein’s theory of gravity have been studied and proposed with various motivations like the quest for a quantum theory of gravity to extensions of anomalies in observations at the solar system, galactic and cosmological scales. These extensions include adding higher powers of Ricci curvature [Formula: see text], coupling the Ricci curvature with scalar fields and generalized functions of [Formula: see text]. In addition, when viewed from the perspective of Supergravity (SUGRA), many of these theories may originate from the same SUGRA theory, but interpreted in different frames. SUGRA therefore serves as a good framework for organizing and generalizing theories of gravity beyond General Relativity. All these theories when applied to inflation (a rapid expansion of early universe in which primordial gravitational waves might be generated and might still be detectable by the imprint they left or by the ripples that persist today) can have distinct signatures in the Cosmic Microwave Background radiation temperature and polarization anisotropies. We give a review of [Formula: see text]CDM cosmology and survey the theories of gravity beyond Einstein’s General Relativity, specially which arise from SUGRA, and study the consequences of these theories in the context of inflation and put bounds on the theories and the parameters therein from the observational experiments like PLANCK, Keck/BICEP, etc. The possibility of testing these theories in the near future in CMB observations and new data coming from colliders like the LHC, provides an unique opportunity for constructing verifiable models of particle physics and General Relativity.


1977 ◽  
Vol 74 ◽  
pp. 327-334
Author(s):  
R. A. Sunyaev

According to current ideas, massive extragalactic systems such as galaxies and clusters of galaxies formed as a result of the growth of small fluctuations in density and velocity which were present in the early stages of expansion of the Universe under the influence of gravitational instability. According to the hot model of the Universe at the epoch corresponding to a redshift z ≈ 1500, recombination of primaeval hydrogen took place and as a result the optical depth of the Universe to Thomson scattering decreased abruptly from about 1000 to 1 - the Universe became transparent. Therefore the observed angular distribution of the microwave background radiation (MWBR) contains information about inhomogeneities in its spatial distribution at a redshift z ∼ 1000. Silk (1968) was the first to note that this “photograph” of the Universe at the epoch of recombination must be enscribed with fluctuations associated with perturbations in the space density and velocity of motion of matter which will later lead to the formation of galaxies and clusters of galaxies.


Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document