Extending the cosmic ladder to z~7 and beyond: using SNIa to calibrate GRB standard candels Speaker: Speaker: Shuang-Nan Zhang Collaborators: Nan Liang,

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Prospects for the Planck Satellite: limiting the Hubble Parameter by SZE/X-ray Distance Technique R. Holanda & J. A. S. Lima (IAG-USP) I Workshop “Challenges.
Advertisements

Observational Constraints on Sudden Future Singularity Models Hoda Ghodsi – Supervisor: Dr Martin Hendry Glasgow University, UK Grassmannian Conference.
What Figure of Merit Should We Use to Evaluate Dark Energy Projects? Yun Wang Yun Wang STScI Dark Energy Symposium STScI Dark Energy Symposium May 6, 2008.
SDSS-II SN survey: Constraining Dark Energy with intermediate- redshift probes Hubert Lampeitl University Portsmouth, ICG In collaboration with: H.J. Seo,
Observational Cosmology - a laboratory for fundamental physics MPI-K, Heidelberg Marek Kowalski.
Marek Kowalski Moriond Cosmology The “Union” Supernova Ia Compilation and new Cosmological Constraints Marek Kowalski Humboldt Universität.
Physics 133: Extragalactic Astronomy and Cosmology Lecture 9; February
(Long) Gamma-Ray Bursts as cosmological probes Davide Lazzati (JILA, U of Colorado) Gabriele Ghisellini (OAB); Giancarlo Ghirlanda (OAB); Claudio Firmani.
Lecture 2: Observational constraints on dark energy Shinji Tsujikawa (Tokyo University of Science)
Constraining the Properties of Dark Energy Using GRBs D. Q. Lamb (U. Chicago) High-Energy Transient ExplorerSwift Department of Astronomy, Nanjing University.
Gamma-Ray Bursts: The Most Brilliant Events in the Universe D. Q. Lamb (U. Chicago) PHYSICS for the THIRD MILLENNIUM: II Huntsville, AL 5–7 April 2005.
THE GAMMA-RAY BURST HUBBLE DIAGRAM TO z=6.6 Brad Schaefer Louisiana State University HUBBLE DIAGRAMS  PLOT DISTANCE vs. REDSHIFT  SHAPE OF PLOT  EXPANSION.
The Present and Future of GRB Cosmography Andrew S. Friedman (Harvard-CfA) & Joshua S. Bloom (Harvard-CfA / UC Berkeley)
Lecture 1: Basics of dark energy Shinji Tsujikawa (Tokyo University of Science) ``Welcome to the dark side of the world.”
Towards a More Standardized Candle Using GRB Energetics & Spectra Andrew S. Friedman 1 and Joshua S. Bloom 1,2 (astro-ph/ ) 1: Harvard-Smithsonian.
Marek Kowalski PTF, Szczecin Exploding Stars, Cosmic Acceleration and Dark Energy Supernova 1994D Marek Kowalski Humboldt-Universität zu Berlin.
1 SDSS-II Supernova Survey Josh Frieman Leopoldina Dark Energy Conference October 8, 2008 See also: poster by Hubert Lampeitl, talk by Bob Nichol.
Yong-Yeon Keum (Seoul National University) APCTP/IEU-Focus-Program on Cosmology and Fundamental Physics.
A Cosmology Independent Calibration of Gamma-Ray Burst Luminosity Relations and the Hubble Diagram Nan Liang Collaborators: Wei-Ke Xiao, Yuan Liu, Shuang-Nan.
Measuring Distances. Introduction Trigonometric Parallax Spectroscopic Parallax Cepheid Variables Type Ia Supernovae Tully-Fisher Relationship Hubble’s.
Dark Energy Bengt Gustafsson: Current problems in Astrophysics Lecture 3 Ångström Laboratory, Spring 2010.
Eric V. Linder (arXiv: v1). Contents I. Introduction II. Measuring time delay distances III. Optimizing Spectroscopic followup IV. Influence.
Query on Cosmic Dark Energy by Error Analyses of Type Ia Supernova Qiu-he Peng (Depart. of Astronomy, Nanjing University)
Robust cosmological constraints from SDSS-III/BOSS galaxy clustering Chia-Hsun Chuang (Albert) IFT- CSIC/UAM, Spain.
Dark energy I : Observational constraints Shinji Tsujikawa (Tokyo University of Science)
PHY306 1 Modern cosmology 4: The cosmic microwave background Expectations Experiments: from COBE to Planck  COBE  ground-based experiments  WMAP  Planck.
Geometrical reconstruction of dark energy Stéphane Fay School of Mathematical Science Queen Mary, University of London, UK
How Standard are Cosmological Standard Candles? Mathew Smith and Collaborators (UCT, ICG, Munich, LCOGT and SDSS-II) SKA Bursary Conference 02/12/2010.
Precise Cosmology from SNe Ia Wang Xiao-feng Physics Department and Tsinghua Center for Astrophysics, Tsinghua University 2005, 9, 22, Sino-French Dark.
Constraining the Lattice Fluid Dark Energy from SNe Ia, BAO and OHD 报告人: 段效贤 中国科学院国家天文台 2012 年两岸粒子物理与宇宙学研讨会.
中国科技大学交叉中心 吴普训 宁波大学理学院 Distance duality relation and cosmic opacity Collaborators: Zhengxiang Li, Jun Chen, Hongwei Yu Li, Wu and Yu, APJL.
Using Baryon Acoustic Oscillations to test Dark Energy Will Percival The University of Portsmouth (including work as part of 2dFGRS and SDSS collaborations)
Type Ia Supernovae and the Acceleration of the Universe: Results from the ESSENCE Supernova Survey Kevin Krisciunas, 5 April 2008.
BAOs SDSS, DES, WFMOS teams (Bob Nichol, ICG Portsmouth)
Cosmic Inhomogeneities and Accelerating Expansion Ho Le Tuan Anh National University of Singapore PAQFT Nov 2008.
1 Evolution of the E peak vs. Luminosity Relation for Long GRBs W.J. Azzam & M.J. Alothman Department of Physics University of Bahrain Kingdom of Bahrain.
DETERMINATION OF THE HUBBLE CONSTANT FROM X-RAY AND SUNYAEV-ZELDOVICH EFFECT OBSERVATIONS OF HIGH-REDSHIFT GALAXY CLUSTERS MAX BONAMENTE – UNIVERSITY OF.
March Julia Becker, Dortmund University March Prediction of Coincidence neutrino spectra from GRBs...and a comparison to average spectra.
Cosmic shear and intrinsic alignments Rachel Mandelbaum April 2, 2007 Collaborators: Christopher Hirata (IAS), Mustapha Ishak (UT Dallas), Uros Seljak.
The dark side of the Universe: dark energy and dark matter Harutyun Khachatryan Center for Cosmology and Astrophysics.
Latest Results from LSS & BAO Observations Will Percival University of Portsmouth StSci Spring Symposium: A Decade of Dark Energy, May 7 th 2008.
Searching High-z Supernovae with HSC and WFMOS
NGC4603 Cepheids in NGC4603 Planetary Nebula Luminosity Function Number.
A Cosmology Independent Calibration of Gamma-Ray Burst Luminosity Relations and the Hubble Diagram Shuang-Nan Zhang Collaborators: Nan Liang, Wei-Ke Xiao,
Lorenzo Amati INAF, Istituto di Astrofisica Spaziale e Fisica Cosmica, Bologna INAF, Istituto di Astrofisica Spaziale e Fisica Cosmica, Bologna.
The XMM Cluster Survey: Project summary and Cosmology Forecasts Kathy Romer University of Sussex.
Observational evidence for Dark Energy
Daisuke YONETOKU (Kanazawa Univ.) T. Murakami (Kanazawa Univ.), R. Tsutsui, T. Nakamura (Kyoto Univ.), K. Takahashi (Nagoya Univ.) The Spectral Ep–Lp and.
Cosmology with Supernovae Bruno Leibundgut European Southern Observatory.
Dark Energy Phenomenology: Quintessence Potential Reconstruction Je-An Gu 顧哲安 National Center for Theoretical Sciences NTHU Collaborators.
Dark Energy Phenomenology: Quintessence Potential Reconstruction Je-An Gu 顧哲安 National Center for Theoretical Sciences CYCU Collaborators.
Two useful methods for the supernova cosmologist: (1) Including CMB constraints by using the CMB shift parameters (2) A model-independent photometric redshift.
Brenna Flaugher for the DES Collaboration; DPF Meeting August 27, 2004 Riverside,CA Fermilab, U Illinois, U Chicago, LBNL, CTIO/NOAO 1 Dark Energy and.
Statistical biases in extragalactic distance determinations. G. Paturel, Observatoire de Lyon In collaboration with P. Teerikorpi IHP Avril 2005.
A New Route to the Hubble Constant (and Dark Energy) from HST Adam Riess (JHU, STScI) SHOES Collaboration.
Probing Dark Energy with Cosmological Observations Fan, Zuhui ( 范祖辉 ) Dept. of Astronomy Peking University.
Determining cosmological parameters with the latest observational data Hong Li TPCSF/IHEP
A Cosmology Independent Calibration of GRB Luminosity Relations and the Hubble Diagram Speaker: Speaker: Liang Nan Collaborators: Wei Ke Xiao, Yuan Liu,
Is Cosmic Acceleration Slowing Down? Invisible Universe-UNESCO-Paris 29 th June-3 rd July 2009 Arman Shafieloo Theoretical Physics, University of Oxford.
Dark Energy Phenomenology  a new parametrization  Je-An Gu 顧哲安 臺灣大學梁次震宇宙學與粒子天文物理學研究中心 Leung Center for Cosmology and Particle Astrophysics (LeCosPA),
Constraining Dark Energy with Double Source Plane Strong Lenses Thomas Collett With: Matt Auger, Vasily Belokurov, Phil Marshall and Alex Hall ArXiv:
Do We Live Within a Large Local Void?
Probing the Coupling between Dark Components of the Universe
Cosmology with Supernovae
Modern cosmology 1: The Hubble Constant
Exploring the systematic uncertainties of SNe Ia
Speaker: Longbiao Li Collaborators: Yongfeng Huang, Zhibin Zhang,
Determining cosmological parameters with current observational data
Combining Different Measurements
6-band Survey: ugrizy 320–1050 nm
Presentation transcript:

Extending the cosmic ladder to z~7 and beyond: using SNIa to calibrate GRB standard candels Speaker: Speaker: Shuang-Nan Zhang Collaborators: Nan Liang, Pu-Xun Wu Tsinghua Center for Astrophysics, Tsinghua University New Directions of Cosmology Mar, 18th, 2009, KITPC/ITP - CAS

Gamma-Ray Bursts (GRBs) are the most intense explosions observed so far. → GRBs are likely to occur in high redshift range (z~7). GRB luminosity relations are connections between measurable properties of the γ-ray emission with the luminosity or energy. → Recent years, several power law GRB relations have been proposed in many works. → Many authors have made use of GRB relations as “standard candles” at very high redshift for cosmology research. GRB luminosity relations see e.g. Ghirlanda, Ghisellini, & Firmani (2006), Schaefer (2007) for reviews

Five GRB luminosity relations (Schaefer 2007, 69 GRBs) lag - L relation (Norris, Marani, & Bonnell 2000) Variability - L relation (Fenimore & Ramirez-Ruiz 2000 ) E peak - L relation (Schaefer 2003; Yonetoku et al. 2004) τ RT - L relation (Schaefer, 2007) E γ - E peak relation (Ghirlanda, Ghisellini & Lazzati 2004)

SN Ia cosmology: ---- adequate sample at low-z which can be used to calibrate the Phillips relation essentially independent of any cosmology. GRB cosmology : ---- difficult to calibrate the relations using a low-z sample Calibration of GRB relations so far have been derived by assuming a particular cosmology (e.g. ΛCDM model). Calibration of GRB relations

The circularity problem In order to investigate cosmology, the relations of standard candles should be calibrated in a cosmological model independent way. ----Otherwise the circularity problem can not be avoided easily. In principle, the circularity problem can be avoided in two ways (Ghirlanda et al. 2006): (i) A solid physical interpretation of these relations which would fix their slope independently from cosmology. (ii) The calibration of these relations by several low redshift GRBs.

Many previous works treated the circularity problem by means of statistical approaches. → simultaneous fitting (Schaefer 2003) the parameters in the calibration curves and the cosmology should be carried out at the same time. → Bayesian method (Firmani et al. 2005) → Markov Chain Monte Carlo global fitting (Li et al. 2008, Wang 2008) Statistical approaches

It is obvious that the sources at the same redshift should have the same luminosity distance for any certain cosmology. Distance of SN Ia obtained directly from observations are completely cosmological model independent. SN Ia cosmology: the distance of nearby SN Ia used to calibrate the Phillips relation can be obtained by measuring Cepheids in the same galaxy. Thus Cepheids has been regard as the first order standard candle to calibrate SNe Ia as the secondly order standard candle. If distance modulus of GRBs can be obtained direct from the SN Ia data, we can calibrate the relations of GRBs in a cosmology independent way. SN Ia → GRBs Cosmic distance ladder Cepheids → SN Ia

There are so many SN Ia samples that we can obtain the distance modulus at any redshift in the redshift range of SN Ia directly from the Hubble diagram of SN Ia. → Interpolation Method (Liang et al, 2008, ApJ) → Iterative Method (Liang & Zhang, 2008, AIPC) If regarding the SN Ia as the first order standard candle, we can obtain the distance modulus of GRBs in the redshift range of SN Ia and calibrate the relations of GRBs in a completely cosmology independent way. By utilizing the relations to the GRB data at high redshift, we can use the standard Hubble diagram method to constrain the cosmological parameters. Using SN Ia calibrate GRB relations

 High-z GRB Cosmology Low-z GRB Standard Candle z SN: 1.7GRB: ~7 Distinguish cosmological models ?  Nearby SN Ia Standard Candle Low-z SN Ia Cosmology Extra-galactic Cepheids Galactic Cepheids  1998: Discovery of Dark Energy 1929: Discovery of cosmic expansion Cosmic distance ladder: Cepheids → SNe Ia → GRBs

We calibrate seven GRB relations with the sample at z<1.4 (Liang et al, 2008, ApJ) (Amati et al. 2002) (Liang & Zhang 2005) GRB Luminosity Relations Calibration

→ Results obtained by using the two interpolation methods are almost identical. → Results obtained by assuming the two cosmological models (with the same sample) differ only slightly from those obtained by using interpolation methods. Calibration results Table 1. Calibration results for the 7 GRB relations with the sample at z<1.4.

Fig. 1. The Hubble Diagram of SNe Ia and GRBs → SNe Ia data (Davis et al. 2007), directly from observations, cosmology independent. These data used to interpolate the distance moduli of GRB low-z “data”, → GRB low-z “data”, interpolated from SN Ia data, (thus also cosmology independent). These data are used to calibrate the GRB “standard” candles. → GRB high-z “data”, obtained from the calibrated GRB “standard” candles (weighted average over 5 relations used in Schaefer 2007); These data are used to fit cosmological parameters at high-z. Concordance modelz=1.4 Hubble Diagram of SNe Ia and GRBs SN1997ff (z = 1.755)

Cosmological results from GRBs (for ΛCDM model) Fig. 2. Ω M -Ω Λ joint confidence contours from 42 GRBs (z>1.4)

Fig. 3. Confidence region in ( Ω M – w 0 ) plane Dark Energy model with a constant EoS (w 0 )

About double-use of SN Ia data After using SN Ia data to calibrate GRB relations, some of the SN Ia events are no-longer independent of GRB relations (Yun Wang 2008) –Problematic for combining SN Ia data with GRB data A possible solution to this problem –Simply throw away those SN Ia events used for calibrating GRB relations

Combined GRBs with SNe Ia, WMAP5, BAO Independent distance modulus data: 357 SNe Ia + 42 GRBs New SN Ia data 307 SCP Union data (Kowalski et al. 2008) 397 CfA SN Ia data (Hicken et al. 2009) CfA3 sample is added to Union data 69 GRB Data Using 40 SN Ia points from 397 CfA SN Ia data to interpolate 27 GRB distance modulus (z<1.4) → 42 GRB data (1.4<z<=6.6) (Liang, Wu & Zhang, 2009)

CMB and BAO Data (WMAP5) → The shift parameter R of CMB → The distance parameter A of baryon acoustic oscillation (SDSS+ WMAP5)

GRB + SN Ia + CMB + BAO 357 SN Ia + 42 GRB CMB (WMAP5) BAO(SDSS+WMAP5)

(i) ΛCDM model: Ω M0 - Ω Λ joint confidence flat universe Ω M0 = −0.026, Ω Λ = −0.023 Ω M0 = −0.015

(ii) wCDM model: Ω M0 - w joint confidence Ω M0 = −0.023, w = −0.08

(iii) Parameterized w(z) model: w 0 = −0.20, w a = −0.58

Summary and Discussion With the basic assumption that objects at the same redshift should have the same luminosity distance, the distance modulus of a GRB can be obtained by interpolating from the Hubble diagram of SNe Ia at z <1.4. Thus we construct the GRB Hubble diagram and constrain cosmological parameters for 42 GRBs at 1.4<z<6.6. Finally, we fit the cosmological parameters by combining the SN Ia and GRB data with the new WMAP 5-year data and BAO data.

Further examinations to the possible evolution effects and selection bias, as well as some unknown biases of SN Ia luminosity relations should be required for considering GRBs as standard candles to cosmological use. Our method avoids the circularity problem completely, compared to previous cosmology-dependent calibration methods.