INTER-UNIVERSITY  CENTRE  FOR  ASTRONOMY  AND  ASTROPHYSICS
(An Autonomous Institution of the University Grants Commission)

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  SEMINAR

 

Dr. Hamsa Padmanabhan

Université de Genève, Switzerland
 
A new window towards Cosmic Dawn: the sub-millimetre frontier
 
 

The epoch of Cosmic Dawn, when the first stars and galaxies were born, is widely considered the final frontier of observational cosmology today. The technique of intensity mapping (IM) has emerged as the powerful tool to explore this phase of the Universe by measuring the integrated emission from sources over a broad range of frequencies. A particular advantage of IM is that it provides a tomographic, or three-dimensional picture of the Universe, unlocking several thousand times more information than available from conventional probes. In addition to hydrogen (the most abundant element), there are exciting prospects for using IM in the submillimetre wavelengths, from the carbon monoxide (CO), ionized carbon and oxygen ([CII] and [OIII]) lines, as tracers of large-scale structure. I will illustrate how the description of dark matter haloes can be extended to describe the abundances and clustering of molecular and ionic species in the early Universe. Combined with the information content of multi-messenger probes, this will also elucidate the properties of the first supermassive black holes at Cosmic Dawn.

 
IUCAA Lecture Hall, Bhaskara 3
March 28, 2023, 16:00 hrs.