Physical Society Colloquium
Measuring how the Universe began: current status of
the cosmic microwave background
Department of Physics and Astronomy UBC
Acoustic processes in the plasma which pervades the early Universe govern the
shape of the anisotropy of the cosmic background which has been measured by
WMAP and other probes, notably ACT and the South Pole Telescope. I'll describe
what we have learned, and what we have not learned from precise measurements
of the temperature and polarization anisotropy of the CMB. Once the Universe
became transparent, these acoustic signals stopped propagating. The density
variations associated with them have remained fixed in co-moving (expanding)
coordinates. I'll finish by talking about CHIME, the Canadian Hydrogen
Intensity Mapping Experiment, a UBC-McGill-Toronto-DRAO collaboration to
measure these same acoustic features at the much later epoch when cosmic
acceleration became important.
>Friday, December 7th 2012, 15:30
Ernest Rutherford Physics Building, Keys Auditorium (room 112)
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