Tuesdays 10:30 - 11:30 | Fridays 11:30 - 12:30
Showing votes from 2017-09-08 12:30 to 2017-09-12 11:30 | Next meeting is Friday Sep 19th, 11:30 am.
An impact model of gravity designed to emulate Newton's law of gravitation is applied to the radial acceleration of disk galaxies. Based on this model (Wilhelm et al. 2013), the rotation velocity curves can be understood without the need to postulate any dark matter contribution. The increased acceleration in the plane of the disk is a consequence of multiple interactions of gravitons (called "quadrupoles" in the original paper) and the subsequent propagation in this plane and not in three-dimensional space. The concept provides a physical process that relates the fit parameter of the acceleration scale defined by McGaugh et al. (2016) to the mean free path length of gravitons in the disks of galaxies. It may also explain the modification of the gravitational interaction at low acceleration levels in MOND (Milgrom 1983, 1994, 2015, 2016). Three examples are discussed in some detail: The spiral galaxies NGC 7814, NGC 6503 and M 33.
Numerical calculations have shown that the increase of binding energy in massive systems due to gravity's self-interaction can account for galaxy and cluster dynamics without dark matter. Such approach is consistent with General Relativity and the Standard Model of particle physics. The increased binding implies an effective weakening of gravity outside the bound system. In this article, this suppression is modeled in the Universe's evolution equations and its consequence for dark energy is explored. Observations are well reproduced without need for dark energy. The cosmic coincidence appears naturally and the problem of having a de Sitter Universe as the final state of the Universe is eliminated.
Galaxy redshift surveys, such as 2dF, SDSS, 6df, GAMA, and VIPERS, have shown that the spatial distribution of matter forms a hierarchical structure consisting of clusters, filaments, sheets and voids. This hierarchical structure is known as the cosmic web. The majority of galaxy survey analyses measure the 2-point correlation, but ignoring the information beyond a small number of summary statistics. Since the matter density field becomes highly non-Gaussian as structures evolve, we expect other statistical descriptions of the field to provide us with additional information. One way to study the non-Gaussianity is to study filaments, which evolve non-linearly from the initial density fluctuation. Several previous works have studied the gravitational lensing of filaments to detect filaments and learn their mass profile. In our study, we provide the first detection of CMB (Cosmic Microwave Background) lensed by filaments and we measure how filaments trace the matter distribution on large scales. More specifically, we assume that, on large scales, filaments trace matter with a constant filament bias, defined as the ratio between the filament overdensity and the mass overdensity. We propose a phenomenological model for the cross power spectrum between filaments and the CMB lensing convergence field. By fitting the model to the data, we measure filament bias.