The Accelerating Universe: Probing Inflation & Dark Energy with the Radio/Microwave Sky
| What | |
|---|---|
| When |
2012-02-02 14:00
2012-02-02 15:00
2012-02-02 from 14:00 to 15:00 |
| Where | Cody Hall |
| Add event to calendar |
|
Keith Vanderlinde (McGill)
Two
of the greatest mysteries in cosmology -- and indeed all of modern
physics -- involve the exponential growth of space: the inflationary
period of the early Universe, and the present-day Dark Energy-driven
expansion. Recent technological advances are fuelling the exploration of
these twin phenomena, allowing precise measurements spanning broad
swaths of the observable Universe.
The
10m South Pole Telescope (SPT) has surveyed a 2500 deg^2 patch of the
southern microwave sky, and has already yielded considerable insights
into these periods of expansion: measurements of the angular power
spectrum of the CMB are beginning to constrain models of inflation,
while growth-of-structure measurements, probed through the evolution of
the galaxy cluster population, now constrain the behaviour of Dark
Energy.
I'll
discuss these results, as well as prospects for a pair of new
experiments: a polarization-sensitive upgrade to SPT, which will
precisely measure the polarized properties of the CMB, potentially
detecting the "smoking gun" of inflation, the imprint of primordial
gravity waves; and the Canadian Hydrogen Intensity Mapping Experiment
(CHIME), which is poised to take a global lead on mapping the large
scale structure of the Universe, thereby precisely measuring the Dark
Energy-driven expansion of space.


