|
The last decade has undergone a renaissance in our knowledge of the values
of the basic cosmological parameters. Three new measurements combine to give a
new picture of the Universe. In 1998, Adam Riess and Brian Schmidt using
Type Ia supernovae measured the first indication of an accelerating expansion
of the Universe (Riess 1998), the dark energy which creates the acceleration is
74% of the contents of the Universe. Recent measurements of the cosmic microwave background
radiation from WMAP (Spergel 2003) shows the Universe is flat and the
measurements from large-scale structure surveys (Percival 2001) and baryon
acoustic oscillations (Eisenstein 2005) constrain the amount of matter in the Universe to
be 26% (22% dark Matter and 4% ordinary matter). On-going research at the CFA includes
a focused investigation of low redshift Type Ia supernovae (at Mt. Hopkins, MMT and Magellan
telescopes) because it is the comparison of the luminosity distance vs redshift at low
and high redshift that leads to the dark energy dominated cosmological picture. Also,
we have a number of investigators in the ESSENCE supernova cosmology project whose
aim to distinguish whether the dark energy is different from a cosmological constant
at the 10% level. Our lastest findings show the data are consistent with a w = -1,
flat Universe (Wood-Vasey 2007).
References:
Riess, A. G. et al 1998, AJ, 116 1009, astro-ph/9805201
Spergel, D.N. et al, 2003, ApJS, 148, 175, astro-ph/0302209
Percival, W.J. et al, 2001, MNRAS, 327, 1297
Eisenstein, D. et al. 2005, ApJ, 633, 560, astro-ph/0501171
Wood-Vasey, W. M. et al. 2007, ApJ accepted.
Project Links
The CFA Supernova web page
CfA Supernova Publications
Supernova Identification at the CfA
Supernova Follow-up at the CfA
Infrared Supernova Follow Up With PAIRITEL
High-Z SN Search Team that discovered the Accelerating Universe
The ESSENCE Supernova cosmology project
People
Robert Kirshner,
Christopher Stubbs ,
Peter Challis,
Stephane Blondin,
Michael Wood-Vasey,
Malcolm Hicken,
|