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Dive into the research topics where Marina Cortês is active.

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Featured researches published by Marina Cortês.


The Astrophysical Journal | 2012

New constraints on the evolution of the stellar-to-dark matter connection: a combined analysis of galaxy-galaxy lensing, clustering, and stellar mass functions from z=0.2 to z=1

Alexie Leauthaud; Jeremy L. Tinker; Kevin Bundy; Peter Behroozi; Richard Massey; Jason Rhodes; Matthew R. George; Jean-Paul Kneib; Andrew J. Benson; Risa H. Wechsler; Michael T. Busha; P. Capak; Marina Cortês; O. Ilbert; Anton M. Koekemoer; Oliver Le Fevre; S. J. Lilly; H. J. McCracken; M. Salvato; Tim Schrabback; N. Z. Scoville; Tristan L. Smith; James E. Taylor

Using data from the COSMOS survey, we perform the first joint analysis of galaxy-galaxy weak lensing, galaxy spatial clustering, and galaxy number densities. Carefully accounting for sample variance and for scatter between stellar and halo mass, we model all three observables simultaneously using a novel and self-consistent theoretical framework. Our results provide strong constraints on the shape and redshift evolution of the stellar-to-halo mass relation (SHMR) from z = 0.2 to z = 1. At low stellar mass, we find that halo mass scales as M-h proportional to M-*(0.46) and that this scaling does not evolve significantly with redshift from z = 0.2 to z = 1. The slope of the SHMR rises sharply at M-* \textgreater 5 x 10(10)M(circle dot) and as a consequence, the stellar mass of a central galaxy becomes a poor tracer of its parent halo mass. We show that the dark-to-stellar ratio, Mh/M*, varies from low to high masses, reaching a minimum of Mh/M-* similar to 27 at M-* = 4.5 x 10(10) M-circle dot and M-h = 1.2 x 10(12) M-circle dot. This minimum is important for models of galaxy formation because it marks the mass at which the accumulated stellar growth of the central galaxy has been themost efficient. We describe the SHMR at this minimum in terms of the “ pivot stellarmass,” M-*(piv) the “pivot halo mass,” M-h(piv), and the “pivot ratio,” (M-h/M-*)(piv). Thanks to a homogeneous analysis of a single data set spanning a large redshift range, we report the first detection of mass downsizing trends for both M-h(piv) and M-*(piv) The pivot stellar mass decreases from M-*(piv) = 5.75 +/- 0.13x10(10) M-circle dot at z = 0.88 to M-*(piv) = 3.55 +/- 0.17x10(10) M-circle dot at z = 0.37. Intriguingly, however, the corresponding evolution of M-h(piv) leaves the pivot ratio constant with redshift at (M-h/M-*)(piv) similar to 27. We use simple arguments to show how this result raises the possibility that star formation quenching may ultimately depend on M-h/M-* and not simply onMh, as is commonly assumed. We show that simple models with such a dependence naturally lead to downsizing in the sites of star formation. Finally, we discuss the implications of our results in the context of popular quenching models, including disk instabilities and active galactic nucleus feedback.


Journal of Cosmology and Astroparticle Physics | 2007

Dynamical dark energy or simply cosmic curvature

Chris Clarkson; Marina Cortês; Bruce A. Bassett

We show that the assumption of a flat universe induces critically large errors in reconstructing the dark energy equation of state at even if the true cosmic curvature is very small, or less. The spuriously reconstructed w(z) shows a range of unusual behaviour, including crossing of the phantom divide and mimicking of standard tracking quintessence models. For 1% curvature and ΛCDM, the error in w grows rapidly above z~0.9 reaching (50%,100%) by redshifts of (2.5,2.9) respectively, due to the long cosmological lever arm. Interestingly, the w(z) reconstructed from distance data and Hubble rate measurements have opposite trends due to the asymmetric influence of the curved geodesics. These results show that including curvature as a free parameter is imperative in any future analyses attempting to pin down the dynamics of dark energy, especially at moderate or high redshifts.


Journal of Cosmology and Astroparticle Physics | 2011

The Lyman-α forest in three dimensions: measurements of large scale flux correlations from BOSS 1st-year data

Anže Slosar; Andreu Font-Ribera; Matthew M. Pieri; James Rich; Jean-Marc Le Goff; Eric Aubourg; J. Brinkmann; Nicolás G. Busca; Bill Carithers; R. Charlassier; Marina Cortês; Rupert A. C. Croft; Kyle S. Dawson; Daniel J. Eisenstein; Jean-Christophe Hamilton; Shirley Ho; Khee-Gan Lee; Robert H. Lupton; Patrick McDonald; Bumbarija Medolin; Demitri Muna; Jordi Miralda-Escudé; Adam D. Myers; Robert C. Nichol; Nathalie Palanque-Delabrouille; Isabelle Pâris; Patrick Petitjean; Yodovina Piškur; Emmanuel Rollinde; Nicholas P. Ross

Using a sample of approximately 14,000 z > 2.1 quasars observed in the first year of the Baryon Oscillation Spectroscopic Survey (BOSS), we measure the three-dimensional correlation function of absorption in the Lyman-α forest. The angle-averaged correlation function of transmitted flux (F = e−τ) is securely detected out to comoving separations of 60 h−1Mpc, the first detection of flux correlations across widely separated sightlines. A quadrupole distortion of the redshift-space correlation function by peculiar velocities, the signature of the gravitational instability origin of structure in the Lyman-α forest, is also detected at high significance. We obtain a good fit to the data assuming linear theory redshift-space distortion and linear bias of the transmitted flux, relative to the matter fluctuations of a standard ΛCDM cosmological model (inflationary cold dark matter with a cosmological constant). At 95% confidence, we find a linear bias parameter 0.16 < b < 0.24 and redshift-distortion parameter 0.44 < β < 1.20, at central redshift z = 2.25, with a well constrained combination b(1+β) = 0.336±0.012. The errors on β are asymmetric, with β = 0 excluded at over 5σ confidence level. The value of β is somewhat low compared to theoretical predictions, and our tests on synthetic data suggest that it is depressed (relative to expectations for the Lyman-α forest alone) by the presence of high column density systems and metal line absorption. These results set the stage for cosmological parameter determinations from three-dimensional structure in the Lyman-α forest, including anticipated constraints on dark energy from baryon acoustic oscillations.


Physical Review D | 2007

On what scale should inflationary observables be constrained

Marina Cortês; Andrew R. Liddle; Pia Mukherjee

We examine the choice of scale at which constraints on inflationary observables are presented. We describe an implementation of the hierarchy of inflationary consistency equations which ensures that they remain enforced on different scales, and then seek to optimize the scale for presentation of constraints on marginalized inflationary parameters from WMAP3 data. For models with spectral index running, we find a strong variation of the constraints through the range of observational scales available, and optimize by finding the scale which decorrelates constraints on the spectral index n{sub S} and the running. This scale is k=0.017 Mpc{sup -1}, and gives a reduction by a factor of more than four in the allowed parameter area in the n{sub S}-r plane (r being the tensor-to-scalar ratio) relative to k=0.002 Mpc{sup -1}. These optimized constraints are similar to those obtained in the no-running case. We also extend the analysis to a larger compilation of data, finding essentially the same conclusions.


Classical and Quantum Gravity | 2007

Inflationary scalar spectrum in loop quantum cosmology

Gianluca Calcagni; Marina Cortês

In the context of loop quantum cosmology, we consider an inflationary era driven by a canonical scalar field and occurring in the semiclassical regime, where spacetime is a continuum but quantum gravitational effects are important. The spectral amplitude and index of scalar perturbations on an unperturbed de Sitter background are computed at lowest order in the slow-roll parameters. The scalar spectrum can be blue tilted and far from scale invariance, and tuning of the quantization ambiguities is necessary for agreement with observations. The results are extended to a generalized quantization scheme including those proposed in the literature. Quantization of the matter field at sub-horizon scales can provide a consistency check of such schemes.


Physical Review D | 2014

The Universe as a Process of Unique Events

Marina Cortês; Lee Smolin

We describe a new class of models of quantum space-time based on energetic causal sets and show that under natural conditions space-time emerges from them. These are causal sets whose causal links are labelled by energy and momentum and conservation laws are applied at events. The models are motivated by principles we propose govern microscopic physics which posit a fundamental irreversibility of time. One consequence is that each event in the history of the universe has a distinct causal relationship to the rest; this requires a novel form of dynamics which an be applied to uniquely distinctive events. We hence introduce a new kind of deterministic dynamics for a causal set in which new events are generated from pairs of progenitor events by a rule which is based on extremizing the distinctions between causal past sets of events. This dynamics is asymmetric in time, but we find evidence from numerical simulations of a 1+1 dimensional model, that an effective dynamics emerges which restores approximate time reversal symmetry. Energetic causal set models differ from other spacetime-free causal set approaches, e.g. Ref. [1] proposed causal sets based on quantum information processing systems, and Ref. [2] proposed causal sets constructed out of standard model particles. Finally we also present a natural twistorial representation of energetic causal sets.


Physical Review D | 2014

Quantum energetic causal sets

Marina Cortês; Lee Smolin

We propose an approach to quantum theory based on the energetic causal sets, introduced in [1]. Fundamental processes are causal sets whose events carry momentum and energy, which are transmitted along causal links and conserved at each event. Energetic causal set models differ from other spacetime-free causal set approaches, e.g. Ref. [2] proposed causal sets based on quantum information processing systems, and Ref. [3] proposed causal sets constructed out of standard model particles. Fundamentally there are amplitudes for causal processes in energetic causal sets, but no space-time. An embedding of the causal processes in an emergent space-time arises only at the semiclassical level. Hence, fundamentally there are no commutation relations, no uncertainty principle and, indeed, no ~. All that remains of quantum theory is the relationship between the absolute value squared of complex amplitudes and probabilities. Consequently, we find that neither locality, nor non locality, are primary concepts, only causality exists at the fundamental level.


Physical Review D | 2014

Comprehensive analysis of the simplest curvaton model

Christian T. Byrnes; Marina Cortês; Andrew R. Liddle

We carry out a comprehensive analysis of the simplest curvaton model, which is based on two non-interacting massive fields. Our analysis encompasses cases where the inflaton and curvaton both contribute to observable perturbations, and where the curvaton itself drives a second period of in inflation. We consider both power spectrum and non-Gaussianity observables, and focus on presenting constraints in model parameter space. The fully curvaton-dominated regime is in some tension with observational data, while an admixture of inflaton-generated perturbations improves the fit. The inflating curvaton regime mimics the predictions of Nflation. Some parts of parameter space permitted by power spectrum data are excluded by non-Gaussianity constraints. The recent BICEP2 results [1] require that the in inflaton perturbations provide a significant fraction of the total perturbation, ruling out the usual curvaton scenario in which the inflaton perturbations are negligible, though not the admixture regime where both inflaton and curvaton contribute to the spectrum.


General Relativity and Gravitation | 2008

Dark energy degeneracies in the background dynamics

Renée Hlozek; Marina Cortês; Chris Clarkson; Bruce A. Bassett

We study the degeneracies between dark energy dynamics, dark matter and curvature using a nonparametric and non-perturbative approach. This allows us to examine the knock-on bias induced in the reconstructed dark energy equation of state, w(z), when there is a bias in the cosmic curvature or dark matter content, without relying on any specific parameterisation of w. Even assuming perfect Hubble, distance and volume measurements, we show that for z > 1, the bias in w(z) is up to two orders of magnitude larger than the corresponding errors in Ωk or Ωm. This highlights the importance of obtaining unbiased estimators of all cosmic parameters in the hunt for dark energy dynamics.


Journal of Cosmology and Astroparticle Physics | 2008

Is the dynamics of scaling dark energy detectable

Bruce A. Bassett; Mike Brownstone; Antonio Cardoso; Marina Cortês; Yabebal Fantaye; Renée Hlozek; Jacques Kotze; Patrice Okouma

We highlight the unexpected impact of nucleosynthesis and other early universe constraints on the detectability of scaling quintessence dynamics at late times, showing that such dynamics may well be invisible until the unveiling of the Stage-IV dark energy experiments (DUNE, JDEM, LSST, SKA). Nucleosynthesis strongly limits potential deviations from ΛCDM. Surprisingly, the standard Chevallier–Polarski–Linder parametrization, w(z) = w0+waz/(1+z), cannot match the nucleosynthesis bound for minimally coupled scaling fields. Given that such models are arguably the best-motivated alternatives to a cosmological constant these results may significantly impact future cosmological survey design and imply that dark energy may well be dynamical even if we do not detect any dynamics in the next decade.

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Lee Smolin

Perimeter Institute for Theoretical Physics

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Bruce A. Bassett

African Institute for Mathematical Sciences

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