Observations and inhomogeneity in cosmology

We interpret distance measurements from nearby galaxies, type Ia supernovae, and gamma-ray bursts in the light of a cosmological model that incorporates a spatial averaging technique to account for the inhomogeneous distribution of structure in the late-epoch Universe and the consequent importance o...

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Main Author: Smale, Peter Rich
Language:en
Published: University of Canterbury. Physics and Astronomy 2012
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10092/6868
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spelling ndltd-canterbury.ac.nz-oai-ir.canterbury.ac.nz-10092-68682015-03-30T15:30:59ZObservations and inhomogeneity in cosmologySmale, Peter Richcosmologytimescape modelobservational cosmologyinhomogeneityWe interpret distance measurements from nearby galaxies, type Ia supernovae, and gamma-ray bursts in the light of a cosmological model that incorporates a spatial averaging technique to account for the inhomogeneous distribution of structure in the late-epoch Universe and the consequent importance of the location of the observer. In the timescape cosmology it is suggested that dark energy is a misidentification of gravitational energy gradients---and consequently of the relative calibration of clocks and rulers---in a complex inhomogeneous structure. This model is consistent with the current supernova and gamma-ray burst data within the limits imposed by our understanding of the systematic uncertainties, to the extent that a Bayesian model comparison with the standard model yields a preference for the timescape model that is “not worth more than a bare mention”. In the spirit of the timescape model, of attempting to understand the astrophysics with as few cosmological assumptions as possible, we perform a model-independent analysis of galaxy distances in the local Universe. We find that the rest frame of the Local Group provides a more uniform Hubble expansion field than the rest frame of the CMB. We find that the dipole in the Hubble expansion field coincides with the dipole in the CMB temperature with a correlation coefficient of -0.92, and that this pattern is induced within 60 h⁻¹ Mpc, provided the variation in the distance-redshift relation due to the formation of structure is taken into account.University of Canterbury. Physics and Astronomy2012-08-20T03:14:22Z2012-08-20T03:14:22Z2012Electronic thesis or dissertationTexthttp://hdl.handle.net/10092/6868enNZCUCopyright Peter Rich Smalehttp://library.canterbury.ac.nz/thesis/etheses_copyright.shtml
collection NDLTD
language en
sources NDLTD
topic cosmology
timescape model
observational cosmology
inhomogeneity
spellingShingle cosmology
timescape model
observational cosmology
inhomogeneity
Smale, Peter Rich
Observations and inhomogeneity in cosmology
description We interpret distance measurements from nearby galaxies, type Ia supernovae, and gamma-ray bursts in the light of a cosmological model that incorporates a spatial averaging technique to account for the inhomogeneous distribution of structure in the late-epoch Universe and the consequent importance of the location of the observer. In the timescape cosmology it is suggested that dark energy is a misidentification of gravitational energy gradients---and consequently of the relative calibration of clocks and rulers---in a complex inhomogeneous structure. This model is consistent with the current supernova and gamma-ray burst data within the limits imposed by our understanding of the systematic uncertainties, to the extent that a Bayesian model comparison with the standard model yields a preference for the timescape model that is “not worth more than a bare mention”. In the spirit of the timescape model, of attempting to understand the astrophysics with as few cosmological assumptions as possible, we perform a model-independent analysis of galaxy distances in the local Universe. We find that the rest frame of the Local Group provides a more uniform Hubble expansion field than the rest frame of the CMB. We find that the dipole in the Hubble expansion field coincides with the dipole in the CMB temperature with a correlation coefficient of -0.92, and that this pattern is induced within 60 h⁻¹ Mpc, provided the variation in the distance-redshift relation due to the formation of structure is taken into account.
author Smale, Peter Rich
author_facet Smale, Peter Rich
author_sort Smale, Peter Rich
title Observations and inhomogeneity in cosmology
title_short Observations and inhomogeneity in cosmology
title_full Observations and inhomogeneity in cosmology
title_fullStr Observations and inhomogeneity in cosmology
title_full_unstemmed Observations and inhomogeneity in cosmology
title_sort observations and inhomogeneity in cosmology
publisher University of Canterbury. Physics and Astronomy
publishDate 2012
url http://hdl.handle.net/10092/6868
work_keys_str_mv AT smalepeterrich observationsandinhomogeneityincosmology
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