Modern Cosmology

Front Cover
Academic Press, Mar 13, 2003 - Science - 440 pages

Modern Cosmology begins with an introduction to the smooth, homogeneous universe described by a Friedman-Robertson-Walker metric, including careful treatments of dark energy, big bang nucleosynthesis, recombination, and dark matter. From this starting point, the reader is introduced to perturbations about an FRW universe: their evolution with the Einstein-Boltzmann equations, their generation by primordial inflation, and their observational consequences. These consequences include the anisotropy spectrum of the cosmic microwave background (CMB) featuring acoustic peaks and polarization, the matter power spectrum with baryonic wiggles, and their detection via photometric galaxy surveys, redshift distortions, cluster abundances, and weak lensing. The book concludes with a long chapter on data analysis.

Modern Cosmology is the first book to explain in detail the structure of the acoustic peaks in the CMB, the E/B decomposition in polarization which may allow for detection of primordial gravity waves, and the modern analysis techniques used on increasingly large cosmological data sets. Readers will gain the tools needed to work in cosmology and learn how modern observations are rapidly revolutionizing our picture of the universe.



  • Provides foundations, calculations, and interpretations which illuminate current thinking in cosmology
  • Covers the major advances in cosmology over the past decade
  • Includes over 100 unique, pedagogical figures
 

Contents

Chapter 1 The Standard Model and Beyond
1
Chapter 2 The Smooth Expanding Universe
23
Chapter 3 Beyond Equilibrium
58
Chapter 4 The Boltzmann Equations
84
Chapter 5 Einstein Equations
117
Chapter 6 Initial Conditions
139
Chapter 7 Inhomogeneities
180
Chapter 8 Anisotropies
216
Chapter 11 Analysis
336
Appendix A Solutions to Selected Problems
392
Appendix B Numbers
415
Appendix C Special Functions
418
Appendix D Symbols
422
Bibliography
426
Index
435
Color Plate Section
443

Chapter 9 Probes of Inhomogeneities
261
Chapter 10 Weak Lensing and Polarization
292

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About the author (2003)

Scott Dodelson is Head of the Department of Physics at Carnegie Mellon University. He received his Ph.D. from Columbia University and was a research fellow at Harvard before moving to Fermilab, the University of Chicago, and Carnegie Mellon. He is the author of more than 200 papers on cosmology, most of which focus on the cosmic microwave background and the large-scale structure of the universe. Dodelson serves as the co-Chair of the Science Committee of the Dark Energy Survey.

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