Tuesdays 10:30 - 11:30 | Fridays 11:30 - 12:30
Showing votes from 2016-11-25 12:30 to 2016-11-29 11:30 | Next meeting is Tuesday May 26th, 10:30 am.
We newly re-interpret cosmic microwave background spectral distortions as solutions to the Boltzmann equation at second order. This approach makes it possible to solve the equation of the momentum dependent temperature perturbations explicitly. In addition, we define higher order spectral distortions systematically, assuming that the collision term is linear in the photon distribution functions. For example, we find the linear Sunyaev-Zel'dovich effect whose momentum shape is different from the usual $y$ distortion, and show that the higher order spectral distortions are also generated as a result of the diffusion process in a language of higher order Boltzmann equations. The method may be applicable to a wider class of problems and has potential to give a general prescription to non-equilibrium physics.
In this paper, we constrain dark energy models using a compendium of observations at low redshifts. We consider the dark energy as a barotropic fluid, with the equation of state a constant as well the case where dark energy equation of state is a function of time. The observations considered here are Supernova Type Ia data, Baryonic Acoustic Oscillation data and Hubble parameter measurements. We compare constraints obtained from these data and also do a combined analysis. The combined observational constraints put strong limits on variation of dark energy energy density with redshift. For varying dark energy models, the range of parameters preferred by the supernova type Ia data is in tension with the other low redshift distance measurements.
We give a complete proposal showing how to detect the non-classical nature of photonic states with naked eyes as detectors. The enabling technology is a sub-poissonian photonic state that is obtained from single photons, displacement operations in phase space and basic non-photon number resolving detectors. We present a detailed statistical analysis of our proposal including imperfect photon creation and detection and a realistic model of the human eye. We conclude that a few tens of hours are sufficient to certify non-classical light with the human eye with a p-value of 10%.