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Type Ia Supernovae on a glass: The bread and butter of peculiar velocities Lunch meeting Aarhus, March 2007 Troels Haugbølle [email protected] Institute for Physics & Astronomy, Århus Univer Collaborators:Steen Hannestad, Bjarne Thomsen

Type Ia Supernovae on a glass: The bread and butter of peculiar velocities Lunch meeting Aarhus, March 2007 Troels Haugbølle [email protected] Institute

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Page 1: Type Ia Supernovae on a glass: The bread and butter of peculiar velocities Lunch meeting Aarhus, March 2007 Troels Haugbølle haugboel@phys.au.dk Institute

Type Ia Supernovae on a glass:The bread and butter of peculiar velocities Lunch meeting Aarhus, March 2007

Troels Haugbø[email protected]

Institute for Physics & Astronomy, Århus University

Collaborators:Steen Hannestad, Bjarne Thomsen

Page 2: Type Ia Supernovae on a glass: The bread and butter of peculiar velocities Lunch meeting Aarhus, March 2007 Troels Haugbølle haugboel@phys.au.dk Institute

Goals of our project

● Predict how well we can probe the local velocity field, with upcoming supernovae surveys

● Design the optimal observational strategy to maximize science output

● Understand how the angular power spectrum of the peculiar velocity field can be used as a tool for constraining cosmology

Page 3: Type Ia Supernovae on a glass: The bread and butter of peculiar velocities Lunch meeting Aarhus, March 2007 Troels Haugbølle haugboel@phys.au.dk Institute

Velocity Fields

● Velocity trace mass:● The peculiar velocity field is sourced by the gravitational

potential: It is directly dependent on the dark matter dist No bias!

● Further away than ~100 Mpc h-1 cosmic variance is small, and we can constrain cosmological models!The velocity field 30 Mpc away The density field 30 Mpc away

-560 960 km/s

Page 4: Type Ia Supernovae on a glass: The bread and butter of peculiar velocities Lunch meeting Aarhus, March 2007 Troels Haugbølle haugboel@phys.au.dk Institute

velocity contra density

● To measure the density we have to ● count standard objects● take care not to miss any!

● Density is derived from number counts. ● Then put in the conversion from

luminosity to mass, completeness, bias to dark matter etc

● The velocity field can be ● measured directly and sparsely ● Good, since there are few SnIa’s

● At large distances the Hubble Flow dominate

Page 5: Type Ia Supernovae on a glass: The bread and butter of peculiar velocities Lunch meeting Aarhus, March 2007 Troels Haugbølle haugboel@phys.au.dk Institute

How to measure vr

● Requisites:The redshift of the host galaxyThe distance or the apparent and absolute magnitudes

● Traditionally used methods to obtain the distance include● The Tully-Fisher relation● Surface brightness fluctuations● Fundamental plane● Reconstruction from the density field of redshift surveys

● They all have an intrinsic scatter of at least m=0.3-0.4

Page 6: Type Ia Supernovae on a glass: The bread and butter of peculiar velocities Lunch meeting Aarhus, March 2007 Troels Haugbølle haugboel@phys.au.dk Institute

How to measure vr

● Requisites:The redshift of the host galaxyThe distance or the apparent and absolute magnitudes

● Traditionally used methods to obtain the distance include● The Tully-Fisher relation● Surface brightness fluctuations● Fundamental plane● Reconstruction from the density field of redshift surveys

● They all have an intrinsic scatter of at least m=0.3-0.4

● With upcoming surveys Type Ia Supernovae will have an intrinsic scatter of m=0.08-0.1

Page 7: Type Ia Supernovae on a glass: The bread and butter of peculiar velocities Lunch meeting Aarhus, March 2007 Troels Haugbølle haugboel@phys.au.dk Institute

Upcoming surveys● The change in apparent magnitude with redshift is used to

constrain the cosmology. Many surveys will be done the next couple of years.

(Hui & Greene a-ph/0512159)

Page 8: Type Ia Supernovae on a glass: The bread and butter of peculiar velocities Lunch meeting Aarhus, March 2007 Troels Haugbølle haugboel@phys.au.dk Institute

QuickTime™ and aTIFF (Uncompressed) decompressor

are needed to see this picture.

Upcoming surveys● Unfortunately surveys have small FOV, and are designed for

high redshift SNe. In fact weak lensing/asteroid surveys are better for local supernovae. They scan the sky continuously, and observe in many bands (typically 6)

Pan-Starrs Sky Mapper

4x1.4Gp

2007

256Mp

2008

Hawaii Australia

LSST3.2Gp

2013

Chile

Page 9: Type Ia Supernovae on a glass: The bread and butter of peculiar velocities Lunch meeting Aarhus, March 2007 Troels Haugbølle haugboel@phys.au.dk Institute

Forecast● We know the local supernova rate

● This gives 60000 Type Ia SN per year inside a distance of 500 h-1 Mpc

Typically peculiar velocities are ~ 400 km s-1

● We want to look at the angular distribution as a function of distance. Binning in a reasonable manner we have

1100 SnIa at 60 h-1Mpc with error vr ~ 220 km s-1

7000 SnIa at 150 h-1Mpc with error vr ~ 550 km s-1

35000 SnIa at 350 h-1Mpc with error vr ~ 1300 km s-1

Page 10: Type Ia Supernovae on a glass: The bread and butter of peculiar velocities Lunch meeting Aarhus, March 2007 Troels Haugbølle haugboel@phys.au.dk Institute

Forecast● We know the local supernova rate

● This gives 60000 Type Ia SN per year inside a distance of 500 h-1 Mpc

● There are light curves, but we need precise redshifts● Low redshift Type Ia Supernovae are not a priority

● We need to do it ourselves● It is not realistic to measure 60000 redshifts per year.

Page 11: Type Ia Supernovae on a glass: The bread and butter of peculiar velocities Lunch meeting Aarhus, March 2007 Troels Haugbølle haugboel@phys.au.dk Institute

How to make a supernova survey

Make Nbody sim

Find density and velocity on a spherical shell

Populate with Supernovae

Calculate Power spectrum

Page 12: Type Ia Supernovae on a glass: The bread and butter of peculiar velocities Lunch meeting Aarhus, March 2007 Troels Haugbølle haugboel@phys.au.dk Institute

...but there is more to it

● With a limited amount of SNe, we can only measure a limited part of the powerspectrum

● Algorithm:● Given a set of Supernovae. Calculate powerspectrum

Page 13: Type Ia Supernovae on a glass: The bread and butter of peculiar velocities Lunch meeting Aarhus, March 2007 Troels Haugbølle haugboel@phys.au.dk Institute

...but there is more to it

● With a limited amount of SNe, we can only measure a limited part of the powerspectrum

● Algorithm:● Given a set of Supernovae. Calculate powerspectrum● Make N mock catalogues with same errors

Page 14: Type Ia Supernovae on a glass: The bread and butter of peculiar velocities Lunch meeting Aarhus, March 2007 Troels Haugbølle haugboel@phys.au.dk Institute

...but there is more to it

● With a limited amount of SNe, we can only measure a limited part of the powerspectrum

● Algorithm:● Given a set of Supernovae. Calculate powerspectrum● Make N mock catalogues with same errors● Compare the mock powerspectra to the underlying

powerspectrum● This gives the error term

Page 15: Type Ia Supernovae on a glass: The bread and butter of peculiar velocities Lunch meeting Aarhus, March 2007 Troels Haugbølle haugboel@phys.au.dk Institute

...but there is more to it

● With a limited amount of SNe, we can only measure a limited part of the powerspectrum

● Algorithm:● Given a set of Supernovae. Calculate powerspectrum● Make N mock catalogues with same errors● Compare the mock powerspectra to the underlying

powerspectrum● This gives the error term

● Subtract the error term from the observed powerspectrum

QuickTime™ and aTIFF (Uncompressed) decompressor

are needed to see this picture.

Page 16: Type Ia Supernovae on a glass: The bread and butter of peculiar velocities Lunch meeting Aarhus, March 2007 Troels Haugbølle haugboel@phys.au.dk Institute

Supernovae on a glass

● We know the local supernova rate

● This gives 60000 Type Ia SN per year inside a distance of 500 h-1 Mpc

● There are light curves, but we need precise redshifts● Low redshift Type Ia Supernovae are not a priority

● We need to do it ourselves● It is not realistic to measure 60000 redshifts per year.

QuickTime™ and aTIFF (Uncompressed) decompressor

are needed to see this picture.

QuickTime™ and aTIFF (Uncompressed) decompressor

are needed to see this picture.

Page 17: Type Ia Supernovae on a glass: The bread and butter of peculiar velocities Lunch meeting Aarhus, March 2007 Troels Haugbølle haugboel@phys.au.dk Institute

Goals of our project

● Predict how well we can probe the local velocity field, with upcoming supernovae surveys

● Design the optimal observational strategy to maximize science output

● Understand how the angular power spectrum of the peculiar velocity field can be used as tool for constraining cosmology

Page 18: Type Ia Supernovae on a glass: The bread and butter of peculiar velocities Lunch meeting Aarhus, March 2007 Troels Haugbølle haugboel@phys.au.dk Institute

Connecting the matter and velocity powerspectrum

● Velocity trace mass:● The angular velocity powerspectrum is related to

the matter powerspectrum:

● Which can be simplified to:

Page 19: Type Ia Supernovae on a glass: The bread and butter of peculiar velocities Lunch meeting Aarhus, March 2007 Troels Haugbølle haugboel@phys.au.dk Institute

Connecting the matter and velocity powerspectrum

QuickTime™ and aTIFF (Uncompressed) decompressor

are needed to see this picture.

QuickTime™ and aTIFF (Uncompressed) decompressor

are needed to see this picture.

● We can find the average amplitude between

l=5-20● It is free of cosmic variance

Page 20: Type Ia Supernovae on a glass: The bread and butter of peculiar velocities Lunch meeting Aarhus, March 2007 Troels Haugbølle haugboel@phys.au.dk Institute

Consequences for cosmology● The overall amplitude depends on

This combination break

degeneracies,and8 can be constrained

● The form of the velocity powerspectrum is directly related to the shape parameter

● The amplitude and shape at l=5-20 is not affected much by cosmic variance

● Success depends on proper observational strategy - can I have a glass, please?

Page 21: Type Ia Supernovae on a glass: The bread and butter of peculiar velocities Lunch meeting Aarhus, March 2007 Troels Haugbølle haugboel@phys.au.dk Institute

Other factors apply to the lumi-nosity distance at high redshift

(Sugiura et al ‘99,Hui & Greene a-ph/0512159, Bonvin et al a-ph/0511183)

Light travels along geodesics, and is influenced by:

● The peculiar motion of the source and the observer, giving rise to a redshift.

● Gravitational lensing. It (de)magnifies the light rays and depends on the fluctuations in the gravitational potential● Gravitational redshift

● An integrated effect from line-of-sight change in the potential (Sachs-Wolfe effect)

Page 22: Type Ia Supernovae on a glass: The bread and butter of peculiar velocities Lunch meeting Aarhus, March 2007 Troels Haugbølle haugboel@phys.au.dk Institute

Other factors apply to the lumi-nosity distance at high redshift

(Sugiura et al ‘99,Hui & Greene a-ph/0512159, Bonvin et al a-ph/0511183)

Light travels along geodesics, and is influenced by:

● The peculiar motion of the source and the observer, giving rise to a redshift.

● Gravitational lensing. It (de)magnifies the light rays and depends on the fluctuations in the gravitational potential● Gravitational redshift

● An integrated effect from line-of-sight change in the potential (Sachs-Wolfe effect)

Important at low redshift

Important at high redshift

Page 23: Type Ia Supernovae on a glass: The bread and butter of peculiar velocities Lunch meeting Aarhus, March 2007 Troels Haugbølle haugboel@phys.au.dk Institute

Are we living in a Hubble Bubble?(Zehavi et al a-ph/9802252)

● Used 44 SnIa● H= vr / dL

● Model suggest we are in an underdense region with radius of 70 Mpc h-1

Page 24: Type Ia Supernovae on a glass: The bread and butter of peculiar velocities Lunch meeting Aarhus, March 2007 Troels Haugbølle haugboel@phys.au.dk Institute

Can we trust the local Hubble parameter?

(Shi a-ph/9707101,Shi MNRAS, 98 )

● Used 20 SnIa (Upper plot) and 36 clusters with T-F relation

● Make CDM models that mimick the local density fields

● Run different cosmological scenarioes

● Compare! It is hard to see the difference, with current data.

● There is a 2% error on H0 out to about 250 Mpc h-1

Page 25: Type Ia Supernovae on a glass: The bread and butter of peculiar velocities Lunch meeting Aarhus, March 2007 Troels Haugbølle haugboel@phys.au.dk Institute

How big is the dipole?(Bonvin et al a-ph/0603240)

● Use the same 44 SnIa● As a test, given H0, measure the

CMB dipole● Gives 405±192 km/s

Page 26: Type Ia Supernovae on a glass: The bread and butter of peculiar velocities Lunch meeting Aarhus, March 2007 Troels Haugbølle haugboel@phys.au.dk Institute

How big is the dipole?(Bonvin et al a-ph/0603240)

● Use the same 44 SnIa● As a test, given H0, measure the

CMB dipole● In the future: Given the CMB dipole

amplitude |v0|, measure H(z)● 100’s of SnIa’s needed for 30% error

Page 27: Type Ia Supernovae on a glass: The bread and butter of peculiar velocities Lunch meeting Aarhus, March 2007 Troels Haugbølle haugboel@phys.au.dk Institute

The lowest multipoles and the local universe

● The lowest multipoles of the angular powerspectrum are easy to understand

● The monopole gives the contraction/expansion

● The dipole measures average flow

● The quadrupole represents the first shear mode

Page 28: Type Ia Supernovae on a glass: The bread and butter of peculiar velocities Lunch meeting Aarhus, March 2007 Troels Haugbølle haugboel@phys.au.dk Institute

The peculiar velocity at higher redshifts and the cosmic web

Timeline in movie

To give a feeling for the cosmic large scale structure I will show you two movies, where we slowly zoom out and see structure further and further away

Distance to the observer

Page 29: Type Ia Supernovae on a glass: The bread and butter of peculiar velocities Lunch meeting Aarhus, March 2007 Troels Haugbølle haugboel@phys.au.dk Institute

The peculiar velocity at higher redshifts and the cosmic web

QuickTime™ and aBMP decompressor

are needed to see this picture.

Page 30: Type Ia Supernovae on a glass: The bread and butter of peculiar velocities Lunch meeting Aarhus, March 2007 Troels Haugbølle haugboel@phys.au.dk Institute

The angular powerspectrum

Size of voids

Size of clusters