Daniele Bertacca
University of the Western Cape
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Featured researches published by Daniele Bertacca.
Modern Physics Letters A | 2007
Daniele Bertacca; Sabino Matarrese; Massimo Pietroni
Considering the general Lagrangian of k-essence models, we study and classify them through variables connected to the fluid equation of state parameter wκ. This allows one to find solutions around which the scalar field describes a mixture of dark matter and cosmological constant-like dark energy, an example being the purely kinetic model proposed by Scherrer. Making the stronger assumption that the scalar field Lagrangian is exactly constant along solutions of the equation of motion, we find a general class of k-essence models whose classical trajectories directly describe a unified dark matter/dark energy (cosmological constant) fluid. While the simplest case of a scalar field with canonical kinetic term unavoidably leads to an effective sound speed cs = 1, thereby inhibiting the growth of matter inhomogeneities, more general non-canonical k-essence models allow for the possibility that cs≪1 whenever matter dominates.
Journal of Cosmology and Astroparticle Physics | 2012
Daniele Bertacca; Roy Maartens; Alvise Raccanelli; Chris Clarkson
We extend previous analyses of wide-angle correlations in the galaxy power spectrum in redshift space to include all general relativistic effects. These general relativistic corrections to the standard approach become important on large scales and at high redshifts, and they lead to new terms in the wide-angle correlations. We show that in principle the new terms can produce corrections of nearly 10% on Gpc scales over the usual Newtonian approximation. General relativistic corrections will be important for future large-volume surveys such as SKA and Euclid, although the problem of cosmic variance will present a challenge in observing this.
Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society | 2013
Alvise Raccanelli; Daniele Bertacca; D. Pietrobon; Fabian Schmidt; Lado Samushia; Nicola Bartolo; Olivier Doré; Sabino Matarrese; Will J. Percival
We use luminous red galaxies from the Sloan Digital Sky Survey (SDSS) II to test the cosmological structure growth in two alternatives to the standard Λ cold dark matter (ΛCDM)+general relativity (GR) cosmological model. We compare observed three-dimensional clustering in SDSS Data Release 7 (DR7) with theoretical predictions for the standard vanilla ΛCDM+GR model, unified dark matter (UDM) cosmologies and the normal branch Dvali–Gabadadze–Porrati (nDGP). In computing the expected correlations in UDM cosmologies, we derive a parametrized formula for the growth factor in these models. For our analysis we apply the methodology tested in Raccanelli et al. and use the measurements of Samushia et al. that account for survey geometry, non-linear and wide-angle effects and the distribution of pair orientation. We show that the estimate of the growth rate is potentially degenerate with wide-angle effects, meaning that extremely accurate measurements of the growth rate on large scales will need to take such effects into account. We use measurements of the zeroth and second-order moments of the correlation function from SDSS DR7 data and the Large Suite of Dark Matter Simulations (LasDamas), and perform a likelihood analysis to constrain the parameters of the models. Using information on the clustering up to r_(max) = 120 h^(−1) Mpc, and after marginalizing over the bias, we find, for UDM models, a speed of sound c_∞ ≤ 6.1e-4, and, for the nDGP model, a cross-over scale r_c ≥ 340 Mpc, at 95 per cent confidence level.
Advances in Astronomy | 2010
Daniele Bertacca; Nicola Bartolo; Sabino Matarrese
In this work we analyze and review cosmological models in which the dynamics of a single scalar field accounts for a unified description of the Dark Matter and Dark En- ergy sectors, dubbed Unified Dark Matter (UDM) models. In this framework, we consider the general Lagrangian of k-essence, which allows to find solutions around which the scalar field describes the desired mixture of Dark Matter and Dark Energy. We also discuss static and spherically symmetric solutions of Einsteins equations for a scalar field with non-canonical kinetic term, in connection with galactic halo rotation curves.
Journal of Cosmology and Astroparticle Physics | 2007
Daniele Bertacca; Nicola Bartolo
We perform an analytical study of the Integrated Sachs-Wolfe (ISW) effect within the framework of Unified Dark Matter models based on a scalar field which aim at a unified description of dark energy and dark matter. Computing the temperature power spectrum of the Cosmic Microwave Background anisotropies we are able to isolate those contributions that can potentially lead to strong deviations from the usual ISW effect occurring in a
Journal of Cosmology and Astroparticle Physics | 2014
Alvise Raccanelli; Daniele Bertacca; Olivier Doré; Roy Maartens
\Lambda
Journal of Cosmology and Astroparticle Physics | 2014
Daniele Bertacca; Roy Maartens; Chris Clarkson
CDM universe. This helps to highlight the crucial role played by the sound speed in the Unified Dark Matter models. Our treatment is completely general in that all the results depend only on the speed of sound of the dark component and thus it can be applied to a variety of unified models, including those which are not described by a scalar field but relies on a single dark fluid.
General Relativity and Gravitation | 2016
Alvise Raccanelli; Daniele Bertacca; Roy Maartens; Chris Clarkson; Olivier Doré
We investigate the properties of the 2-point galaxy correlation function at very large scales, including all geometric and local relativistic effects --- wide-angle effects, redshift space distortions, Doppler terms and Sachs-Wolfe type terms in the gravitational potentials. The general three-dimensional correlation function has a nonzero dipole and octupole, in addition to the even multipoles of the flat-sky limit. We study how corrections due to primordial non-Gaussianity and General Relativity affect the multipolar expansion, and we show that they are of similar magnitude (when f_(NL) is small), so that a relativistic approach is needed. Furthermore, we look at how large-scale corrections depend on the model for the growth rate in the context of modified gravity, and we discuss how a modified growth can affect the non-Gaussian signal in the multipoles.
Journal of Cosmology and Astroparticle Physics | 2014
Daniele Bertacca; Roy Maartens; Chris Clarkson
We present the galaxy number overdensity up to second order in redshift space on cosmological scales for a concordance model. The result contains all general relativistic effects up to second order that arise from observing on the past light cone, including all redshift effects, lensing distortions from convergence and shear, and contributions from velocities, Sachs-Wolfe, integrated SW and time-delay terms. This result will be important for accurate calculation of the bias on estimates of non-Gaussianity and on precision parameter estimates, introduced by nonlinear projection effects.
Journal of Cosmology and Astroparticle Physics | 2013
Didam G. A. Duniya; Daniele Bertacca; Roy Maartens
Galaxy clustering on very large scales can be probed via the 2-point correlation function in the general case of wide and deep separations, including all the lightcone and relativistic effects. Using our recently developed formalism, we analyze the behavior of the local and integrated contributions and how these depend on redshift range, linear and angular separations and luminosity function. Relativistic corrections to the local part of the correlation can be non-negligible but they remain generally sub-dominant. On the other hand, the additional correlations arising from lensing convergence and time-delay effects can become very important and even dominate the observed total correlation function. We investigate different configurations formed by the observer and the pair of galaxies, and we find that the case of near-radial large-scale separations is where these effects will be the most important.