Alain Blanchard & Monique Signore 
Frontiers of Cosmology [PDF ebook] 
Proceedings of the NATO ASI on The Frontiers of Cosmology, Cargese, France from 8 – 20 September 2003

Destek
€309.23
Ödeme metodları

İçerik tablosu

Dedication, Preface Acknowledgments;

1 Basics of Cosmology

1. Geometry and Dynamics ; 2.Important quantities needed for observations

3. Some solutions of EFL equations:some cosmological models; 4. The standard Big Bang Nucleosynthesis (SBBN);5. Observations of “primordial abundances’; 6. Confrontation of the observed “primordial abundances” to the predictions of the s BBN; Conclusions; References

2 X-ray View of Galaxy Clusters,

1. Observing Clusters in X-rays — the Chandra Observatory;2. Regular Clusters XD Cooling Flows A478;3. Physics of Cluster Cores; Acknowledgments; References;

3 Clusters: an optical point of view;

1. Cluster detections in the optical;2. Studies of clusters;3. Acknowledgements;References

4 Cosmology with Clusters;

1. Introduction;2. What is a cluster? ; 3. The spherical model;4. The mass function;

5. Connection to the observations; 6. Properties of Clusters and scaling relations; 7. Clusters abundance evolution; 8. The baryon fraction; 9. Conclusion; References

5 Astrophysical detection of Dark Matter ;

1. Signals from the Dark universe ; 2. Inference probes;3. Physical probes;4. Conclusion; References

6 Non-thermal processes in galaxy clusters ;

1. Non-thermal and relativistic phenomena in galaxy clusters;2. The origin of cosmic rays in galaxy clusters; 3. The astrophysics of cosmic rays in galaxy clusters ; 4. Conclusions; References

7 Cosmological Inflation ;

1. Introduction; 2. The hot Big-Bang scenario and its problems ;3. Inflation and inflationary dynamics;4. Basics of cosmological perturbations ;Synchronous gauge;Longitudinal or Newtonian gauge; Flat-slicing gauge ; 5. Inflationary perturbations; 6. Basics of quantum field theory;7. Perturbation spectrum; 8. Conclusion; References

8 An introduction to quintessence ;

1. The two cosmological constant problems;2. A scalar field asdark energy;3. Stability of the wQ = Const regime ;4. Model building;5. Dark energy and structure formation; 6. Observational status; References

9 CMB Observational Techniques and Recent Results

1. Introduction;2. Observational Techniques ;3. Recent Observations; 4. Summary; Acknowledgments; References;

10 Fluctuations in the CMB ; Andrew H. Jaffe

1. Introduction;2. Cosmological Preliminaries; 3. The Last Scattering Surface ; 4. Perturbations on Large and Small Scales;5. Oscillations in the Primordial Plasma;6. The Power Spectrum of CMB Fluctuations;7. The CMB and Cosmological Parameters;8. Conclusions; Acknowledgments; References

11 Supernovae as astrophysical objects;

1. Some History;2. Supernova classification;3. Input Energy;4. Core-collapse supernovae ;

5. Type Ia supernovae ;6. Conclusions; References

12 Cosmology with Supernovae ;

1. Introduction;2. The Hubble constant;3. The expansion history of the universe;4. Universal acceleration according to Type Ia supernovae ;5. Characterising dark energy ;6. Conclusions; References

13 Gravitational lensing;

1. Introduction;2. Physical mechanisms; Multiple images and displacement field;The amplification matrix ;3. Gravitational lenses in Cosmology;The case of a spherically symmetric mass distribution;Critical lines and caustics in realistic mass distributions; 4. Cosmic Shear: weak lensing as a probe of the large-scale structure;5. Conclusions and perspectives: cosmic shear in a precision;Cosmology era; References

14 Dark Matter ;

1. Introduction;2. Local Dark Matter;3. Clusters and Groups of Galaxies;4. Masses of Galaxies ;

5. The Nature of Dark Matter;6. Summary;Acknowledgments;References

15 Dark Matter and Galaxy Formation;

1. Challenges of dark matter;2. Global baryon inventory;3. Confirmation via detailed census of MWG/M31; 4. Hierarchical galaxy formation;5. Unresolved issues in galaxy formation theory; 6. Resurrecting CDM ;7. An astrophysical solution: early winds;8. Observing CDM via the WIMP LSP; 9. The future ; References

16 Non-Baryonic Dark Matter;

1. The need for non-baryonic dark matter;2. Popular candidates for non-baryonic dark matter; 3. Neutralino dark matter searches; High energy neutrinos from the core of the Sun or of the Earth; Gamma-rays and cosmic rays from neutralino annihilation in galactic halos;Signals from neutralino annihilation at the Galactic Center; 4. Conclusions ; References


 

Bu e-kitabı satın alın ve 1 tane daha ÜCRETSİZ kazanın!
Dil İngilizce ● Biçim PDF ● Sayfalar 334 ● ISBN 9781402030574 ● Dosya boyutu 15.0 MB ● Editör Alain Blanchard & Monique Signore ● Yayımcı Springer Netherland ● Kent Dordrecht ● Ülke NL ● Yayınlanan 2005 ● İndirilebilir 24 aylar ● Döviz EUR ● Kimlik 2147049 ● Kopya koruma Sosyal DRM

Aynı yazardan daha fazla e-kitap / Editör

4.988 Bu kategorideki e-kitaplar