Exercise 2: Integration/Interpolation for Cosmological
Ages/Magnitudes
Solutions (partial)
Part 2: The analytic solution for the (1,0) model is
H0T(z)=(2/3)[1-(1+z)-3/2]
Part 3: At z=5 the lookback times for the models are
(0.4,0): 0.71174, (0.4,0.4): 0.77567, (0.4,0.6): 0.81632,
(1,0): 0.62131
The lookback time plot shows the redshift vs. time
curves out to z=5 for the four models. The triangles near the
right axis give the extrapolation to infinite redshift, i.e. the
total ages. Physically, one sees that increasing the matter density
decreases the lookback time at a given redshift while adding a
cosmological constant has the opposite effect. Basically, ordinary matter
decelerates the expansion while exotic matter accelerates it.
For choosing the boundary conditions for the spline fit, use your
knowledge that as z approaches 0, H0T(z) goes to z. Therefore
the derivative, k0 on page 9 of Neal Katz' Computation I
spline notes, equals 1 and the second derivative q"(0)=T"(0)=0. At
z=infinity we expect the time to converge to the total age and again
the second (and first) derivative should be zero, so for fitting this
function
the "natural boundary" conditions are appropriate and in fact match the
first case of "known first derivatives".
Part 4: Numerically, it is not generally a good idea to integrate over
an infinite interval. It is best to transform the variable of integration
to create a finite interval; the original form of the lookback time
relation given on page 5 of Eric Linder's Cosmology II notes in terms of
scale factor a satisfies this, with the limits being 0 to 1. Taking a
factor of a-3 out of the integrand bracket makes the integrand
well behaved as a goes to 0.
The total ages for the four models are plotted as triangles near the
right axis of the lookback time plot. The numerical
values for the ages are
(0.4,0): 0.77870, (0.4,0.4): 0.84563, (0.4,0.6): 0.88796,
(1,0): 0.66667
The analytic result for the (1,0) case is 2/3. The components have
the same effect on the age as on the lookback time discussed in Part 3.
Note that the values should be multiplied by
H0-1=9.78 x 109h-1
years
Part 5:
Note that increasing the ordinary matter density decreases the magnitude
at fixed redshift, corresponding to intrinsically more luminous objects
(since the magnitude scale is reversed). The cosmological constant
"dims" objects - basically it makes the luminosity distance larger for
fixed redshift since the universe was expanding more rapidly. From
the deviation plot one clearly sees that exotic models can have a dimming
effect recently and a brightening effect in the more distant past. Perhaps
the most important conclusion is that even at moderately high redshifts,
e.g. z=2, models can differ by less than 0.2 mag and therefore be hard to
decide between.