2005 7th Annual Meeting of the Northwest Section
Friday–Saturday, May 13–14, 2005;
Victoria, BC, Canada
Session B4: Astrophysics and Gravity
2:00 PM–4:25 PM,
Friday, May 13, 2005
MacLaurin
Room: D114
Chair: Chris Pritchet, University of Victoria
Abstract ID: BAPS.2005.NWS.B4.2
Abstract: B4.00002 : Measuring Dark Energy with the Supernova Legacy Survey
2:36 PM–3:12 PM
Preview Abstract
Abstract
Author:
James Neill
(University of Victoria)
The Supernova Legacy Survey was brought about in response to the
discovery, at the close of the last millennium, that the expansion
of the universe is accelerating. The implied dark energy driving
this acceleration is completely unknown at this point and poses a
significant challenge to the standard model of physics. Dark energy
theories abound and include a vitiation of Einstein's ``biggest
blunder'': the Cosmological Constant, quintessence theories which
model dark energy as a scalar field, and radical models that require
new physics. The implications for fundamental physics that a
confirmation of any of these theories would bring are far-reaching
and demand a measurement of the universal expansion at an
unprecedented
accuracy in order to select between these theories. The Supernova
Legacy Survey is a five year, multi-observatory project that is on
track to characterize 700 Type Ia supernovae, the 'standard candles'
that provided the original measurement of the acceleration. Already
the most successful high-redshift supernova study in history after
only 18 months of operation, the survey will not only measure dark
energy at a higher statistical significance by increasing the number
of measurements by an order of magnitude over previous studies, but
will also offer improved control of systematic effects by repeated
observing of 4 one-square-degree areas of the sky and by using the
largest telescopes in the world to acquire the spectra of the distant
suprenovae. The resulting measurement of the equation of state of
the universe has the potential to eliminate broad categories of
dark energy theories. The survey database characterizing this large
sample of Type Ia supernovae will provide the cornerstone for third
generation surveys already being designed and due to take the stage
in the middle of the next decade.
To cite this abstract, use the following reference: http://meetings.aps.org/link/BAPS.2005.NWS.B4.2