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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

Modelling the formation of dense cold clouds

Golanski, Yann January 1999 (has links)
No description available.
2

On the formation of large-scale structure in the universe

Susperregi, Mikel January 1995 (has links)
No description available.
3

Die Mechanik der Leucipp-Democritschen atome unter besonderer Berücksichtigung der Frage nach dem Ursprung der Bewegung derselben ...

Liepmann, Hugo, January 1885 (has links)
Inaug.-Diss.--Leipzig. / Vita.
4

Commensurabilities of planetary orbits

Melita, Mario Daniel January 1996 (has links)
No description available.
5

The NOAO-XCS survey & the optical to X-ray scaling relations of galaxy clusters

Mehrtens, Nicola January 2011 (has links)
In this thesis we present the NOAO-XMM Cluster Survey (NXS). NXS has provided optical follow-up of X-ray cluster candidates serendipitously detected by the XMM Cluster Survey (XCS). We report details on the execution, data reduction and analysis of 154 wide-field MOSAIC images containing 630 XCS cluster candidates. We present a redshift algorithm, based on the ‘red-sequence technique', designed to confirm cluster identifications and extract photometric cluster redshifts from NXS data. This algorithm exploits the homogeneity of elliptical cluster galaxies to provide simultaneous redshift and optical richness estimates. In addition, we apply this redshift algorithm to the Sloan Digital Sky Survey public data releases SDSS DR7 and SDSS Stripe 82. The resulting catalogue of ~500 optically confirmed XCS clusters with red-sequence redshifts is presented, spanning the redshift range 0.1<z<1.0. This sample will enable a future XCS measurement of the cosmological parameters Ωm and σ8, as well as a selfconsistent measure of the cluster X-ray luminosity to temperature scaling relation. Furthermore, for clusters with measured X-ray temperatures or luminosities, we measure the optical richness of red-sequence galaxies within the cluster virial radius (R200). Using these measurements, we investigate the optical halo-mass scaling relation. Understanding cluster optical scaling relations, in particular the optical-light to halo-mass relation, is key for surveys hoping to measure cosmological parameters using optically detected clusters alone. By combining the optical NXS and SDSS data sets with X-ray information from XCS, this thesis provides much needed optical to X-ray scaling relations for future optical cluster surveys.
6

Inflationary model constraints using higher-order statistics of the primordial curvature perturbation

Anderson, Gemma Jayne January 2014 (has links)
Cosmological inflation is the leading candidate for the origin of structure in the Universe. However, a huge number of inflationary models currently exist. Higher-order statistics, particularly the bispectrum and trispectrum, of the primordial curvature perturbation can potentially be used to discriminate between competing models. This can provide an insight into the precise physical mechanism of inflation. Current constraints on inflationary models using the amplitude fNL of the bispectrum are quoted for specific templates. This results in much of the inflationary parameter space remaining unexplored. By utilizing the symmetries of the underlying quasi-de Sitter spacetime to construct a generic ‘effective field theory' Lagrangian with adjustable parameters, one can encompass many single-field models of inflation in a unifying framework. In the first part of this thesis we perform a partial-wave decomposition of the bispectrum produced at horizon-exit by each operator in the effective Lagrangian, which we use to find the principal components using a Fisher-matrix approach. This allows us to probe much more of the parameter space. Cosmic Microwave Background bispectrum data is used to estimate the amplitude of each component, which can then translated into constraints on particular classes of single-field models. We consider the implications for DBI and ghost inflation as examples. In the second part of this thesis we extend the transport formalism, first introduced by Mulryne, Seery and Wesley, to calculate the trispectrum generated during superhorizon evolution in inflationary models with multiple fields. We provide transport equations that track the evolution of the local trispectrum non-linearity parameters tNL and gNL throughout inflation. We compute these for several models as examples.
7

Constraining the physics of the early Universe

Pinto Vieira, Jose Pedro January 2018 (has links)
The established cosmological theory which describes the history of the Universe since shortly after the “Big Bang” until today is remarkably successful. Thanks to the increasing precision of available observational data, we are now able to considerably constrain the geometry and composition of the Universe - and to glimpse how these will evolve in the near future. However, this success comes at a price: one must assume the Universe “started” in a highly fine-tuned initial condition. Understanding what came before this is therefore one of the main goals of modern cosmology. This thesis attempts to further our understanding of the epoch before this initial condition in three different ways. Firstly, the concept of negative absolute temperatures (NAT) is introduced and its potential relevance for cosmology is investigated. In particular, it is shown that a Universe at a NAT should undergo a period of inflation - although it is unclear whether this would be consistent with current observations. Secondly, work is done on the topic of the evolution of networks of cosmic strings - topological defects which are expected to form in a broad class of phase transitions the Universe may have gone through. A model which takes into account the presence of small-scale structure in strings is used to address questions concerning the existence and stability of scaling regimes for these networks. Finally, it is investigated how future experiments might try to falsify a simple class of canonical single-field slow-roll inflation models by measuring the running and the running of the running of the spectral index of scalar perturbations.
8

Predictions in multifield inflation

Frazer, Jonathan January 2013 (has links)
Models of inflation with more than one active field are an important class where it is not fully understood how to compute predictions. This problem can be understood in terms of two characteristics of these models: the sensitivity to initial conditions and the superhorizon evolution of the primordial density perturbation ζ. This thesis seeks to make significant progress in understanding how to overcome these two issues. To track the superhorizon evolution of ζ in general requires numerical techniques. By extending the transport method first proposed by Mulryne, Seery and Wesley, here, a computationally efficient and highly versatile method for computing the statistics of ζ is developed. The increased efficiency and versatility allows models that were previously unaccessible to be studied. Utilising this new capability two models are explored. A new toy model of inflation in the Landscape and a 6-field D-brane model of inflation first proposed by Agarwal, Bean, McAllister, and Xu. The nature of these models allows for a statistical analysis of inflationary realisations to be performed. We conclude that the fundamental ability to constrain models of this kind is determined by the scale of features in the potential. We also show the D-brane model is under considerable pressure from current observations of the spectral index and may be ruled out by future observations. Finally, I show that there exists a class of models for which the probability distribution of observables may be computed analytically. I show the peak of the density function is largely dominated by the geometry of the potential and comparatively insensitive to the distribution of initial conditions. I argue that this characteristic should be expected in a broader range of models and for such models, it is possible to make robust predictions.
9

Observing the epoch of reionization and dark ages with redshifted 21-cm hydrogen line

Shukla, Hemant January 2015 (has links)
The billion years subsequent to the Big Bang pose the next challenging frontier for precision cosmology. The concordant cosmological model, ΔCDM, propounds that during this period, the dark matter gravitationally shepherds the baryonic matter to form the primordial large-scale structures. This era is termed the Dark Ages (DA). The following era, the Epoch of Reionization (EoR), leads to the formation of the first stars and galaxies that reionize the permeating neutral hydrogen. The linear polarization of the cosmic background radiation and the Gunn-Peterson troughs in quasar absorption spectra provide indirect evidence for the EoR. Currently, there is no observational evidence for the DA. While state-of-the-art radio telescope arrays, Low Frequency Array (LOFAR) and Square Kilometre Array (SKA), propose various strategies to observe the early phases of the Universe, the advanced simulations employing high-performance computing (HPC) methodologies continue to play significant role in constraining various models based upon limited observational data. Despite a wide range of research, there is no end-to-end simulation solution available to quantifiably address the observational challenges due to statistical and systematic errors including foregrounds, ionosphere, polarization, RFI, instrument stability, and directional dependent gains. This research consolidates the cutting-edge simulation solutions, Cube-P3M, C2-Ray, and MeqTrees, to build an HPC prototype pipeline entitled, Simulating Interferometry Measurements (SIM). To establish and validate the efficacy of the SIM pipeline, the research builds a theoretical framework of two science drivers, viz., the presence of Lymanlimit absorbers and measuring non-Gaussianity from the 21-cm data. Thereafter, using the LOFAR and SKA telescope configurations, the SIM generates data visibility cubes with direction dependent and independent propagation effects. Finally, SIM extracts the original signal through standard techniques exploring the parametric phase-space. Results are presented herein.
10

Ultraviolet complete inflation : looking at inflation from fundamental physics

Dias, Mafalda January 2013 (has links)
To completely describe the inflationary era in the early universe is an extremely ambitious task. The main reason is that its dynamics are highly sensitive to ultraviolet physics, making the knowledge of inflation dependent on our ignorance of what is happening at these energy scales. This is not necessarily a weakness of inflation as a paradigm; it is ultimately its most interesting characteristic. Accepting this lack of control on the details of inflationary dynamics brings observational cosmology and the search for an ultraviolet complete theory of gravity together. In this thesis, this duality is explored with the aim of making steps towards an efficient way of studying inflation and its predictions and signatures. This challenge is twofold; first, since fundamental theories are far from being able to explicitly determine the early universe physics, the construction of approximate toy models is unavoidable. For this reason, I identify the key issues for the building of a realistic inflation model, in particular the delicate flatness of the inflaton potential, the strong possibility of multifield dynamics and the necessity of a viable reheating, and in the light of these analyze how best to approximate an ultraviolet complete inflation. For this analysis, two different classes of case studies are presented: inflation in the brane picture and in a holography inspired scenario. On the other hand, since any toy model of an ultraviolet complete inflation necessarily presents a high level of complexity, the computation of predictions for observables is not trivial. For this purpose, I develop numerical tools that manage to compute these parameters efficiently and with a high level of accuracy for a broad range of inflation classes with more than one active field. For each case study, I determine the impact of the inclusion of microphysics contributions in the resulting observational signatures and confront them with data.

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