HEP-Astro Seminar | Dark Energy Dynamics, Spatial Curvature, Neither, or Both?
Bharat Ratra (Kansas State University)
Observations over the last two and half decades have persuaded cosmologists that (as yet only indirectly detected) dark energy is by far the main component of the energy budget of the current universe. I review a few simple dark energy models, including the currently-standard ΛCDM cosmological model, and compare their predictions to observational data, to derive cosmological parameter constraints and to study consistency of different data sets. I summarize observational constraints on dark energy dynamics and spatial curvature, two parameters that extend away from the time-independent cosmological constant dark energy and flat spatial hypersurfaces of the standard ΛCDM model. I also summarize observational constraints on the Hubble constant. I conclude with a list of my favorite open cosmological questions.
| Building: | West Hall |
|---|---|
| Event Type: | Workshop / Seminar |
| Tags: | Physics, Science |
| Source: | Happening @ Michigan from HEP - Astro Seminars, Department of Physics |
Events
Featured
Feb
28
Saturday Morning Physics | Surviving the Death of a Star: Life on Planets Orbiting White Dwarfs
Juliette Becker, Wisconsin Center for Origins Research (University of Wisconsin-Madison)
10:30 AM
170 & 182
Weiser Hall
Upcoming
Feb
17
Applied Physics Seminar | Innovations in Scintillator Detector Technologies for Nuclear Material Monitoring and Verification
Dr. Sara A. Pozzi, Donald C. Graham Professor of Engineering and Professor of Nuclear Engineering and Radiological Sciences, and Professor of Physics atthe University of Michigan
12:00 PM
340
West Hall
Feb
18
Department Colloquium | The Final Fermilab muon g-2 result
Tim Chupp (U-M Physics)
3:00 PM
340
West Hall
Feb
19
The Department of Astronomy 2025-2026 Colloquium Series Presents:
Dr. Andrea Banzatti, Associate Professor, Texas State University
3:30 PM
411
West Hall
