Tuesdays 10:30 - 11:30 | Fridays 11:30 - 12:30
Showing votes from 2017-04-04 11:30 to 2017-04-07 12:30 | Next meeting is Tuesday May 19th, 10:30 am.
We study the effects of black hole dark matter on the dynamical evolution of stars in dwarf galaxies. We find that mass segregation leads to a depletion of stars in the center of dwarf galaxies and the appearance of a ring in the projected stellar surface density profile. Using Segue 1 as an example we show that current observations of the projected surface stellar density rule out at the 99.9% confidence level the possibility that more than 4% of the dark matter is composed of black holes with a mass of few tens of solar masses.
In order to explore the generic properties of a backreaction model to explain the observations of the Universe, we exploit two metrics to describe the late time Universe. Since the standard FLRW metric cannot precisely describe the late time Universe on small scales, the template metric with an evolving curvature parameter is employed. However, we doubt that the evolving curvature parameter also obeys the scaling law, thus we make use of observational Hubble parameter data (OHD) to constrain parameters in dust cosmology to testify it. First, in FLRW model, after getting best-fit constraints of $\Omega^{{\mathcal{D}}_0}_m = 0.25^{+0.03}_{-0.03}$, $n = 0.02^{+0.69}_{-0.66}$, and $H_{\mathcal{D}_0} = 70.54^{+4.24}_{-3.97}\ {\rm km/s/Mpc}$, evolutions of parameters are studied. Second, in template metric context, by marginalizing over $H_{\mathcal{D}_0}$ as a prior of uniform distribution, we obtain the best-fit values as $n=-1.22^{+0.68}_{-0.41}$ and ${{\Omega}_{m}^{\mathcal{D}_{0}}}=0.12^{+0.04}_{-0.02}$. Moreover, we utilize three different Gaussian priors of $H_{\mathcal{D}_0}$, which result in different best-fits of $n$, but almost the same best-fit value of ${{\Omega}_{m}^{\mathcal{D}_{0}}}\sim0.12$. With these constraints, evolutions of the effective deceleration parameter $q^{\mathcal{D}}$ indicate that the backreaction can account for the accelerated expansion of the Universe without involving extra dark energy component in the scaling solution context. However, the results also imply that the prescription of the geometrical instantaneous spatially-constant curvature $\kappa_{\mathcal{D}}$ of the template metric is insufficient and should be improved.