Tuesdays 10:30 - 11:30 | Fridays 11:30 - 12:30
Showing votes from 2018-10-26 12:30 to 2018-10-30 11:30 | Next meeting is Tuesday Jul 22nd, 10:30 am.
Cosmological observations are promising ways to improve of our understandings of the neutrino mass properties. The upper bound on their sum of mass is given by the cosmic microwave background and large scale structures. These measurements are all parity-even. Here we show that, the presence of neutrino mass provides a unique contribution to the directions of the angular momentum of galaxies, which is the first parity-odd neutrino effect of galaxies or halos. This parity-odd observable is free of the contamination of linear perturbation theory, and can be cleanly separated from other non-gravitational effects. A complete 21-cm survey deep to redshift 1 can give a $5\sigma$ confidence level of detecting the neutrino torque effect if the sum of neutrino masses is 0.05 eV.
Blazar observations point toward the possible presence of magnetic fields over intergalactic scales of the order of up to $\sim1\,$Mpc, with strengths of at least $\sim10^{-16}\,$G. Understanding the origin of these large-scale magnetic fields is a challenge for modern astrophysics. Here we discuss the cosmological scenario, focussing on the following questions: (i) How and when was this magnetic field generated? (ii) How does it evolve during the expansion of the universe? (iii) Are the amplitude and statistical properties of this field such that they can explain the strengths and correlation lengths of observed magnetic fields? We also discuss the possibility of observing primordial turbulence through direct detection of stochastic gravitational waves in the mHz range accessible to LISA.
The last few years have witnessed a renewed interest in the possibility that primordial black holes (PBHs) constitute the dark matter of the universe. Current observational constraints leave only a few PBH mass ranges for this possibility. One of them is around $10^{-12} M_\odot$. If these PBHs are due to enhanced scalar perturbations produced during inflation, their formation is inevitably accompanied by the generation of fully non-Gaussian gravitational waves (GWs) with frequency peaked in the mHz range, precisely at the maximum sensitivity of the LISA mission. We show that, if these primordial black holes are the dark matter, LISA will be able to detect not only the GW power spectrum, but also the non-Gaussian three-point GW correlator, thus allowing this scenario to be thoroughly tested.