Format results
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Shapes of non-Gaussianity in warm inflation
Mehrdad Mirbabayi Institute for Advanced Study (IAS)
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Newborn super star clusters at Cosmic Noon seen through gravitational lensing
Liang Dai University of California, Berkeley
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Cosmology and astrophysics with the extragalactic light: background and fluctuations
Gabriela Sato-Polito Institute for Advanced Study (IAS) - School of Natural Sciences (SNS)
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The reconstruction of the CMB lensing bispectrum
Alba Kalaja University of Groningen
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Strong Gravitational Lensing in the Era of Data-Driven Algorithms
Yashar Hezaveh Université de Montréal
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Mapping the Universe at 21 cm
Seth Siegel Perimeter Institute for Theoretical Physics
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Indigenizing the Drake Equation: exploring the question of life in our Galaxy through an Indigenist lens.
Hilding Neilson Memorial University of Newfoundland
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Structure formation at the juncture of simulations and perturbation theory
Nicholas Kokron Stanford University
A key challenge for the next decade of survey cosmology is ensuring that the models for summary statistics they measure, such as galaxy clustering and lensing, are sufficiently accurate in light of the high degree of precision of these measurements. A recently proposed class of models, hybrid effective field theory (hybrid EFT), combines perturbation theory-based descriptions of the tracer--matter connection with the nonlinear dark matter distributions produced by cosmological N-body simulations. I will show how hybrid EFT promises to be a powerful model for describing the two-point statistics of clustering and lensing to small scales at high accuracy. I will proceed to survey recent developments in this juncture between simulations and perturbation theory that show their combination is mutually beneficial beyond just modelling two-point statistics.
Zoom link: https://pitp.zoom.us/j/93665218297?pwd=T3RLUzRaVDljR2hCNGFxM0l2TVZEdz09
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Cutting Cosmological Correlators
Harry Goodhew University of Cambridge
The initial conditions of our universe appear to us in the form of a classical probability distribution that we probe with cosmological observations. In the current leading paradigm, this probability distribution arises from a quantum mechanical wavefunction of the universe. In this talk I will discuss how we can adapt flat space bootstrapping techniques to the quantum fluctuations in the early universe, in particular showing that the requirement of unitary time evolution, colloquially the conservation of probabilities, fixes the analytic structure of the wavefunction and of all the cosmological correlators it encodes.
Zoom link: https://pitp.zoom.us/j/95812107239?pwd=bVZMcWdHTVM0Y0tFZGMxS2FCVGF0Zz09
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Shapes of non-Gaussianity in warm inflation
Mehrdad Mirbabayi Institute for Advanced Study (IAS)
Sphaleron heating has been recently proposed as a mechanism to realize warm inflation when inflaton is an axion coupled to pure Yang-Mills. As a result of heating, there is a friction coefficient γ\propto T^3 in the equation of motion for the inflaton, and a thermal contribution to cosmological fluctuations. Without the knowledge of the inflaton potential, non-Gaussianity is the most promising way of searching for the signatures of this model. Building on an earlier work by Bastero-Gil, Berera, Moss and Ramos, we compute the scalar three-point correlation function and point out some distinct features in the squeezed and folded limits. As a detection strategy, we show that the combination of the equilateral template and one new template has a large overlap with the shape of non-Gaussianity over the range 0.01 <= γ/Η <= 1000 and in this range 0.7<|f_NL|<50.
Zoom link: https://pitp.zoom.us/j/95921707772?pwd=NUNhU1QrRm5HaDJNMEYyaTJXQmZnQT09
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Newborn super star clusters at Cosmic Noon seen through gravitational lensing
Liang Dai University of California, Berkeley
Super star clusters with masses > 1e6 Msun are thought to be progenitors of globular clusters (GCs). Their births however are seldomly seen in the local Universe. The puzzle of chemically peculiar populations found in most globular clusters implies that much is to be understood about what happens in the immediate environment of these young systems that host a large number of massive stars. I will present a photometric and spectroscopic study of a highly magnified, LyC-leaking super star cluster with a mass ~1e7 Msun and an age ~3–4 Myr, in a lensed Cosmic Noon galaxy. We found dense photoionized clouds at just ~ 10 pc that are highly enriched with nitrogen. We theorize that these dense clouds originate from massive star ejecta and may have implications for the origin of chemically peculiar stars. If time permits, I will discuss another lensed star cluster in the same galaxy that has a lensing anomaly and show intense Fe III fluorescent emissions pumped by Lyman alpha radiation. I will discuss a theory of trapped Lyman alpha radiation to explain this unusual spectral phenomenon, which again hints at an extremely gas-enshrouded environment caused by massive star ejecta inside a compact young super star cluster. These findings call for a better understanding of the interplay between radiation, gravity, gas and massive star evolution in young super star clusters.
Zoom link: https://pitp.zoom.us/j/97462607086?pwd=b0tkVXlTeG5MTnFheEphWXYyOFdhQT09
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Pushing the frontiers of gravitational encounters and collisionless dynamics
Uddipan Banik Princeton University
The long range nature of gravity complicates the dynamics of self-gravitating many-body systems such as galaxies and dark matter (DM) halos. Relaxation/equilibration of perturbed galaxies and cold dark matter halos is typically a collective, collisionless process. Depending on the perturbation timescale, this process can be impulsive/fast, adiabatic/slow or resonant. First, I shall present a linear perturbative formalism to compute the response (in all three regimes) of disk galaxies to external perturbations such as satellite impacts. I shall elucidate how phase-mixing of the disk response gives rise to phase-space spirals akin to those observed by Gaia in the Milky Way disk, and how these features can be used to constrain the Milky Way’s potential as well as its dynamical history. Next, I shall discuss the secular evolution of a massive perturber due to the back reaction of the near-resonant response of the host galaxy/halo. In this context I shall present two novel techniques to model the secular torque (dynamical friction) experienced by the perturber: 1. a self-consistent, time-dependent, perturbative treatment and 2. a non-perturbative orbit-based framework. These two approaches explain the origin of certain secular phenomena observed in N-body simulations of cored galaxies but unexplained in the standard Chandrasekhar and LBK theories of dynamical friction, namely core-stalling and dynamical buoyancy. I shall briefly discuss some astrophysical implications of these phenomena: potential choking of supermassive black hole mergers in cored galaxies, and the possibility of constraining the inner density profile (core vs cusp) of DM dominated dwarf galaxies and therefore the DM particle nature.
Zoom link: https://pitp.zoom.us/j/99089663538?pwd=aVVjV2ozMkZRTkE0ZW1Ib0dGUC9tdz09
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Low-energy EFT causality bounds
Victor Pozsgay Imperial College London
In this talk, I will present a new tool to constrain low-energy Wilson coefficients in a scalar EFT (scalar for simplicity's sake but the range of applicability is much wider) based on the requirement that such theories should respect causality. Causality will be defined in the sense that no low-energy observer should be able to measure any resolvable time-advance resulting from a scattering event. I will show that these so-called causality bounds are in remarkable agreement with previously derived positivity bounds (where low energy constraints on the 4-point amplitude make use of physical assumptions of the UV completion of the EFT), while being considerably simpler and a better candidate to get cosmological and black hole gravitational bounds.
Zoom link: https://pitp.zoom.us/j/92424925160?pwd=bnRNWE81eEQ4NHY4a28rNGMwTitUdz09
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Cosmology and astrophysics with the extragalactic light: background and fluctuations
Gabriela Sato-Polito Institute for Advanced Study (IAS) - School of Natural Sciences (SNS)
Cosmology and astrophysics with the extragalactic light: background and fluctuations
Abstract: The aggregate light emitted by all extragalactic sources can be measured either as an absolute intensity or through its spatial fluctuations; these are known as line-intensity mapping (LIM) when a particular line transition is targeted. I will discuss how these measurements can be used both to learn about galaxy evolution and to investigate the presence of more speculative sources of radiation, such as decaying dark matter. I will then discuss the prospects of LIM to probe the interstellar and intergalactic medium, as well as structure on large scales. In particular, I will focus on the joint information across different line transitions and across different tracers, such as galaxies and extragalactic CMB foregrounds.
Zoom Link: https://pitp.zoom.us/j/94959896129?pwd=QjhzWS9rczdBNGFndUhhNDZ1K1FLQT09
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Entropy-Area Law from Interior Semi-classical Degrees of Freedom
Yuki Yokokura RIKEN
Can degrees of freedom in the interior of black holes be responsible for the entropy-area law? If yes, what spacetime appears? In this talk, I answer these questions at the semi-classical level. Specifically, a black hole is considered as a bound state consisting of many semi-classical degrees of freedom which exist uniformly inside and have maximum gravity. The distribution of their information determines the interior metric through the semi-classical Einstein equation. Then, the interior is a continuous stacking of AdS_2 times S^2 without horizon or singularity and behaves like a local thermal state. Evaluating the entropy density from thermodynamic relations and integrating it over the interior volume, the area law is obtained with the factor 1/4 for any interior degrees of freedom. Here, the dynamics of gravity plays an essential role in changing the entropy from the volume law to the area law. This should help us clarify the holographic property of black-hole entropy. [arXiv: 2207.14274]
Zoom link: https://pitp.zoom.us/j/99386433635?pwd=VzlLV2U4T1ZOYmRVbG9YVlFIemVVZz09
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The reconstruction of the CMB lensing bispectrum
Alba Kalaja University of Groningen
Weak gravitational lensing by the intervening large-scale structure (LSS) of the Universe is the leading non-linear effect on the anisotropies of the cosmic microwave background (CMB). The integrated line-of-sight gravitational potential that causes the distortion can be reconstructed from the lensed temperature and polarization anisotropies via estimators quadratic in the CMB modes. While previous studies have focused on the lensing power spectrum, upcoming experiments will be sensitive to the bispectrum of the lensing field, sourced by the non-linear evolution of structure. The detection of such a signal would provide additional information on late-time cosmological evolution, complementary to the power spectrum.
Zoom link: https://pitp.zoom.us/j/94880169487?pwd=dzRWcVRwQ2dVdWZ3N2RjOWU2RDUyZz09
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Strong Gravitational Lensing in the Era of Data-Driven Algorithms
Yashar Hezaveh Université de Montréal
In this talk I will share our recent work in developing statistical models based on machine learning methods. In particular, I will discuss posterior sampling in low- and high-dimensional spaces and connect this to two ongoing projects: measuring the small-scale distribution of dark matter and estimating the expansion rate of the Universe. I will discuss how the speed and the accuracy gained by these models are essential for the large volumes of data from the next generation sky surveys. I will finish by mentioning a few other projects and a new initiative for interdisciplinary collaboration in astrophysics and data sciences.
Zoom link: https://pitp.zoom.us/j/98316228305?pwd=UWwrZkIwUG1QZFBkYzc1eVdNSW1Ldz09
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Mapping the Universe at 21 cm
Seth Siegel Perimeter Institute for Theoretical Physics
Mapping the intensity of the 21 cm emission line from neutral hydrogen (HI) is a promising technique for characterizing the 3D matter distribution over large volumes of the Universe and out to high redshifts. The Canadian Hydrogen Intensity Mapping Experiment (CHIME) is a radio interferometer specifically designed for this purpose. CHIME recently reported the detection of 21 cm emission from large-scale structure between redshifts 0.8 and 1.4. This was achieved by stacking maps of the radio sky, constructed from 102 nights of CHIME data, on the angular and spectral locations of galaxies and quasars from the eBOSS clustering catalogs. In this talk, I will introduce the experiment and provide an overview of the detection. I will describe key aspects of both the data processing pipeline and the simulation pipeline used to model the stacked signal. I will discuss the implications of the detection. Finally, I will evaluate the prospects for using CHIME -- and it's successor, the Canadian Hydrogen Observatory and Radio-transient Detector (CHORD) -- to measure the power spectrum of 21 cm emission, identify the signature of baryon acoustic oscillations, and constrain dark energy.
Zoom link: https://pitp.zoom.us/j/94362295704?pwd=NnQxa1pteWJVTzVBTVFYUmlsWnlVUT09
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Indigenizing the Drake Equation: exploring the question of life in our Galaxy through an Indigenist lens.
Hilding Neilson Memorial University of Newfoundland
The Drake Equation is a thought experiment whose purpose is to understand the ingredients necessary for life and advanced technological civilizations to exist on other worlds in our galaxy. However, beyond reflecting on life on Earth we have no knowledge of many of these ingredients, such as the number of planets that have life, the number of with intelligent life, the number with advanced civilizations, and the lifetimes of these civilizations. In this talk I will review the Drake Equation and the biases that scientists have traditionally had in discussing this equation and how it has led to the current searches of biological and technological signatures. I will discuss how the Drake Equation looks different if we consider it through the lens of Indigenous methods and sciences and how these methods would lead to a dramatically different view of life in our Galaxy.
Zoom link: https://pitp.zoom.us/j/95952883179?pwd=a2lzaEc2UWJER2k2VmwzRVgvMVpoQT09