Cze��,
Rewording what I said on Friday, this is a lecture course where
instead of exams, the lecturer asks you to play games. :)
Witam, zagrajcie!
http://humber.northnet.org/weeks/TorusGames/
For those absent on Fri 8 Mar: we did a review of curvature for new
people, and then a quick introduction to topology.
This Friday (15 marca) I propose to get back to curvature (or more
strictly speaking, to the metric parameters, which include Omega_m,
Omega_Lambda and... w_Q, the quintessence parameter) and to explain
what Staszek, Gary and I did in:
http://de.arXiv.org/abs/astro-ph/0106135
and what I think can be done better and with other public data sets.
I think this should be enough to give everyone a feel for what needs
to be and/or can be done, and I propose that the following Friday,
22 March, we make a decision on which shape-of-the-Universe project
we wish to carry out, and start discussing how to organise this,
conceptual questions, programming concepts, etc.
Pozdrawiam
Boud
PS: Pami�tajcie: ta lista jest dla wszysce - wszystko mo�e pisa� na
liscie!
The simplest definition I found of the difference between the particle
horizon and the event horizon is here:
http://iapetus.phy.umist.ac.uk/Teaching/Cosmology/Metric.html
The particle horizon is defined as the largest comoving distance
from which light can have reached us - today.
The event horizon is defined as the largest comoving distance from
which light will ever reach us - at any time in the future.
To have an event horizon, a universe needs to expand "very quickly",
e.g. in a de Sitter universe, whose scale factor follows a pure
(positive) exponential:
http://nedwww.ipac.caltech.edu/level5/Watson/Watson6_1.html
Apparently the definitions come from Rindler (1956, MNRAS, 116, 662):
http://nedwww.ipac.caltech.edu/level5/Seitter/Seitter3_2_2.html
but the figure is not clear to me.
Boud
Cze�� wszysce,
On Friday 1 March we started from the beginning again, going
through comoving coordinates and curvature, with an added touch of
history.
Where did Euclid spend 30 years studying geometry and writing an
extremely good review paper? Cairo, Africa. That's where zero
curvature geometry models come from. Western scientific culture is
fundamentally African. [Anyone want to search for http refs?]
Who developed and introduced algebra and the Hindi decimal system to
the West? An Arabic-speaking Iranian scientist born in... Khiva,
Uzbekistan, hence known as al-Khwarizmi, who spent a lot of his life
in Baghdad:
http://www.mscf.uky.edu/~carl/ma330/project2/al-khwa21.html
So, the "gor" in algorithm comes from "Khiva" in Uzbekistan.
http://www.ati-uzbekistan.com/english/uzbekistan/touristcentres/khiva.htm
So Western scientific culture is equally Asian. (Do you really want to
do physics using roman numerals? VIII + I = IX ?)
Modern "Western" science involves a mix between thinking in terms of
geometry (African), decimal numbers (Indian), algebra (Arabic culture) and
algorithms/software (Arabic/Iranian/Uzbek), though of course there
are some European and North/South American contributions too...
IMHO, observational cosmologists tend to think in terms of numbers
and software, theoretical cosmologists tend more to think in terms of
algebra (in the more modern concepts of algebra, calculus etc.).
We discussed whether people would prefer
(1) continuing lectures in a similar more or less traditional style,
or rather
(2) move on to a research project involving some hands-on code-writing
and observational data.
** standard ruler project **
The particular project ("standard ruler project") I propose is a
rewrite of the code of
http://de.arXiv.org/abs/astro-ph/0106135
and application of the same analysis to a larger superset and to
different observational data sets, and using more refined observational
corrections in order to get more signal out of the data. Anyone
contributing will have their name on any publications resulting
from the work (unless they choose not to!). This relates to the
shape of the Universe in the sense that
- Omega_m,
- Omega_Lambda and
- w_Quintessence
can be thought of just as parameters of the metric which convert [right
ascension, declination, redshift] into 3-dimensional comoving
positions.
If I understood people's comments right (please feel free to
correct me), the initial preferences were:
(1) Bart
(2) Marcin, Rafa�, Micha�, Sebastian
Since we didn't cover topology during Friday's session, what would
seem to match both preferences is:
- 1 more or less conventional lecture (next week) on topology
- following lecture as introduction to the material sufficient for
understanding the standard ruler project and together discussing how
we could divide the work (code writing, debugging, paper writing)
** "Archeops - topology project?" **
Micha� asked about the possibility of writing software for topology
work. This is certainly possible, but it's less clear that it would
result in publications or observational detections. I think that the
Grenoble people would be happy to have someone contribute to programming
work for Archeops analysis, and that in return, we could do topology
analysis, but this would be a *much* bigger scale project (in terms
of programming effort, coordination, and... politics) than the standard
ruler project.
Comparison local parameter vs topology projects:
definite exciting result if result, then how important
standard ruler YES moderate to big
Archeops topology NO big to huge
effort (programming, coordination, politics)
standard ruler easy in a few months, IMHO
Archeops topology heavy, over 12 months
Hmmm.... There is also a very easy, quick topology project which
should lead to a publication relating to a principle for detecting
topology. :-) Let's call this:
** "roots of the identity project" **
The ultimate decision should be from the students - I personally will
do the standard ruler project sooner or later. Sooner would be better,
but later is also OK. I will also do the roots of the identity
project, when I have a spare moment...
Think about it, discuss it on this list, and at next Friday's meeting
after going through a topology introduction we can see what people
think.
Pozdrawiam
Boud
Dear students,
Nazywam si� Boud Roukema, jestem kosmologiem, zacz� jak adiunkt
w Centrum Astronomii.
This semester, I'm giving a "monograph course" on "the Shape of the
Universe", or more precisely, on observational ways of trying to
measure the shape of the Universe, aimed at the level of 4th year
students, but 3rd years or other students are also welcome. You'll
find more information on this at:
http://www.astro.uni.torun.pl/sympa/shape-univ/index.html
Sorry for the confusion about the starting date! Because of this, the
next session will have a subject which is essentially the same as the
first, unless you all think it is too easy and you already know it! So
here are the details:
----------------------------------------------------------------------
Time/Date: 14:00-16:00 Friday 1 March 2002
Place: Radio Observatory main lecture room, Piwnice
Goal of first lecture:
* Basic concepts of curvature, topology, extra dimension as a
psychological tool to help imagine curved and/or multiply connected
spaces, comoving coordinates, with the aim of making sure the 4th year
students (or others relatively new to cosmology) understand
these.
----------------------------------------------------------------------
Two students who were there, Pawel and Andrzej, said that it was very
easy, so if they can explain everything to you, we could maybe move
immediately on to observational techniques. But this depends on you.
Apparently there was another course on something about business and
computing in the other building this afternoon.
Well, the best way to learn computing if you want to be able to find a
job in it and/or want to create your own software company is in the
free software movement, e.g. GNU/Linux and the GNU Public Licence
(GPL):
http://www.gnu.org/home.pl.htmlhttp://groups.google.com/groups?group=pl.comp.os.linux
If you write software for a company which is *not* protected under the
GPL, and if the company fires you and you want the freedom to use this
software in another company, you will not be allowed to! Not only will
you have lost your job, but all your intellectual effort will be
wasted. :-(
And starting your own company would be much easier with free software,
since you would only have to add one small new idea to the huge amount
of existing free software. You would not have the cost of buying
proprietary software or using an unstable, inefficient operating
system full of bugs.
So free software is better, z moim skromnem zdaniem...
In astronomy, most of the software we use and write is more or less
free software, but its commercial value is about... zero z�oty.
However, if you help work on cosmology GPL software, it would be a good
learning exercise.
And I think that one of the best ways for you to learn about
observational measurements of the shape of the Universe is to work
with software that is related to observational work on the shape of
the Universe. I would be happy to support students interested in
doing this, and hope that both the face-to-face lectures and the
shape-univ mailing list (and archive) can be used to think about this.
Anyway, the content of the course is more or less:
----------------------------------------------------------------------
= Quantitative =
- curvature measurements, e.g.
http://de.arXiv.org/abs/astro-ph/0201092
- topology measurements, e.g.
http://de.arXiv.org/abs/astro-ph/0010185
[This is the ref I promised during today's lecture. For a *lot* more
detail on topology (but slightly out-of-date regarding observational
research and with a few small, minor errors) is LaLu95:
http://de.arXiv.org/abs/gr-qc/9605010
]
Please look for good introductions to these on the web (w po polsku
lub w po angielsku), i prosz� wysylacie any links that you think are good
to the shape-univ mailing list. That way, everybody else can just
click and read.
= Qualitative =
- curvature
Here's one which seems nice, but is essentially without algebra:
http://www.astro.princeton.edu/~clark/ToC.html
It's said to be at high school level, but it's important to develop
intuition. Understanding is not just abstract symbols on paper, it's
also intuitive understanding.
But please provide a better link if you can!
- topology - intuition
Here's a good exercise for developing topology intuition:
http://humber.northnet.org/weeks/TorusGames/
Don't be embarrassed to play the games - it's part of learning.
----------------------------------------------------------------------
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Hope to see you next Friday,
Pozdrawiam
Boud
<cross-post to cosmo-spotka & shape-univ>
Here is the description of the first shape-univ announcement (this
way this will be archived on the shape-univ archive):
http://www.astro.uni.torun.pl/sympa/cosmo-spotka/2002-02/msg00004.html
Several people will get a double of this message. Feel free to
unsubscribe from or subscribe to one list or the other (or even both)
depending on your interests, and encourage others to subscribe to
those lists they feel are relevant.
Hopefully see you all tomorrow!
Cze��
Boud