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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
1

Svarta hål i Vintergatan : Mörk materia, gravitationslinser och MACHOs

Höglund Aldrin, Ronja January 2009 (has links)
<p>Ett av de mest notoriska dilemman i dagens kosmologi är den mörka materians natur och dess förekomst i universum. Mot bakgrund av detta har nya forskningsdiscipliner med rötterna i Einsteins relativitetsteori växt fram, bl.a. teorin om gravitationslinser som möjliggör en indirekt observationsmetod av ljussvaga kompakta objekt som annars skulle vara mycket svåra eller omöjliga att upptäcka på traditionella vis, såsom svarta hål.</p><p>Via en genomgång av grundteorin för gravitationslinser, några enkla teoretiska studier och en grundläggande felmarginalsanalys illustreras hur olika typer av kompakta objekt i Vintergatans omedelbara omgivning kan ge upphov till vissa karakteristiska linsfenomen. Detta sätts i relation till rådande teorier om den tidigaste stjärnbildningen och de massiva kompakta rester som denna generation av mycket massiva stjärnor bör ha efterlämnat – i synnerhet <em>intermediära svarta hål</em> med massor på 100-1000 M<sub>sol</sub> som ännu kan finnas i dagens mörka galaxhalor. Sådana objekt kan komma att upptäckas i betydligt högre grad i framtiden med de observationstekniker som är under utveckling idag. </p> / <p>One of the most notorious dilemmas in cosmology today is the nature of dark matter and its distribution in the universe. Due to this, new research disciplines originating from Einstein’s theory of relativity have emerged, among them the theory of gravitational lensing which makes it possible to indirectly observe faint compact objects that would otherwise be very difficult or impossible to discover with traditional means, up to and including black holes.</p><p>Through a rundown of the basic theory of gravitational lensing, a couple of simple theoretical models and an elementary error analysis, it is illustrated how different types of compact objects in the immediate vicinity of the Milky Way can yield various characteristic lensing phenomena. This is put in relation to contemporary theories regarding the earliest star formation and the massive compact remnants this generation of very massive stars should have left behind – particularly <em>intermediate black holes</em> with masses of 100-1000 M<sub>sun</sub> that may still be found in dark galactic halos of today. Such objects can contribute to future observations carried out with the observational technology being developed at present.</p>
2

Spectral Properties of Type Ia Supernovae and Implications for Cosmology

Nordin, Jakob January 2011 (has links)
Type Ia supernovae can, for a short period of time, reach the same brightness as an entire galaxy. They are responsible for the creation of a large fraction of all heavy elements and can be used, as standard candles, to prove that the expansion of the universe is accelerating. Yet, we do not fully understand them. A basic picture where Type Ia supernovae are caused by thermonuclear explosions of white dwarfs is generally accepted, but the details are still debated. These unknowns propagate into systematic uncertainties in the estimates of cosmological parameters. A Monte Carlo framework, SMOCK, designed to model this error propagation, is presented. Evolution with time/distance and the nature of reddening are studied as the dominant astrophysical uncertainties. Optical spectra of Type Ia supernovae contain a wealth of information regarding the nature of these events, and can be used both to understand supernovae and to limit the systematic uncertainties in cosmological parameter estimates. We have reduced spectra observed with the Nordic Optical Telescope and the New Technology Telescope in conjunction with the SDSS-II supernova survey, and compared spectral properties (pseudo-Equivalent Widths and line velocities) of this sample with local supernovae.We have further studied possible systematic difficulties in such comparisons between nearby and distant supernovae, caused by noise and host galaxy contamination.Taking such uncertainties into account, we find a tentative evolution in supernova properties with redshift, compatible with expected demographic changes. Correlations with light curve shape found by other studies are confirmed. A tentative correlation with light curve colour is also presented. The latter could indicate an intrinsic component of the observed reddening, i.e. independent of interstellar dust in the host galaxy. / At the time of the doctoral defense, the following paper was unpublished and had a status as follows: Paper 4: Accepted.

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