Found 41 talks width keyword dark matter
	Abstract
I present the recent results obtained using the updated version of MG-MAMPOSSt, a code that constrains modified gravity (MG) models viable at cosmological scales using determination of galaxy cluster mass profiles with kinematics and lensing analyses. I will discuss limitations and future developments of this method in view of upcoming imaging and spectroscopic surveys, as well as the possibilities of including X-ray data to break degeneracy among model parameters. Finally I will show preliminary results about the constraints that can be obtained on the inner slope of dark matter profiles when adding the velocity dispersion of the Brightest Central Galaxy (BCG) in the dataset of MG-MAMPOSSt.
	Abstract
Vimos Public Extragalactic Redshift Survey (VIPERS) is a spectroscopic  survey designed to  investigate the spatial distribution of ~90k  galaxies on redshift 0.4<z<1.2. The catalogue of spectroscopic  observations, combined with auxiliary photometric data, is perfect for  evolutionary studies of different types of galaxies. But also for  tracing rare objects. One of them are the so-called “red nuggets”,  progenitors of the most massive galaxies in the local Universe.  The  discovery of red nuggets - highly massive, passive and extremely compact  galaxies  -  at high redshift challenged the leading cosmological  models, as they do not fit into the evolutionary paths of passive  galaxies. Taking into account  that  the galaxies' mergers are  stochastic events, it is possible that some red nuggets  remain  relatively unaltered for billions of years. Those survivors constitute a  group of unique galaxies in the local Universe,  commonly named  “relics”. Despite numerous studies dedicated to red nuggets and relics,  the link between the population of compact, massive, passive galaxies in  the early Universe and their remnants in the local Universe, is still  poorly understood. 
 
In my talk I  will present the first spectroscopically selected  catalogue of red nuggets at the intermediate redshift.  It is the most  extensive catalogue of this kind of galaxies above redshift z > 0.5.   Selected under the most strict criteria, the group of 77 objects  consists of a statistically important sample, which allows for analysis  of physical properties of those rare passive giants. I will discuss the  influence of compactness criteria on the sample size. Moreover I will  present  VIPERS red nuggets number densities and discuss the  environmental preferences of those exceptional galaxies.
	Abstract
Cosmological observations (redshifts, cosmic microwave background  radiation, abundance of light elements, formation and evolution of  galaxies, large-scale structure) find explanations within the standard  Lambda-CDM model, although many times after a number of ad hoc  corrections. Nevertheless, the expression ‘crisis in cosmology’  stubbornly reverberates in the scientific literature: the higher the  precision with which the standard cosmological model tries to fit the  data, the greater the number of tensions that arise. Moreover, there  are alternative explanations for most of the observations. Therefore,  cosmological hypotheses should be very cautiously proposed and even  more cautiously received. 
 
There are also sociological and philosophical arguments to support  this scepticism. Only the standard model is considered by most  professional cosmologists, while the challenges of the most  fundamental ideas of modern cosmology are usually neglected. Funding,  research positions, prestige, telescope time, publication in top  journals, citations, conferences, and other resources are dedicated  almost exclusively to standard cosmology. Moreover, religious,  philosophical, economic, and political ideologies in a world dominated  by anglophone culture also influence the contents of cosmological  ideas.
	Abstract
A key problem that we are facing in cosmology nowadays is that we cannot make accurate predictions with our current theoretical models. We have all of the pieces of the standard model but it doesn't have an analytical solution. The only way to have accurate predictions is to run a cosmological simulation. Then, why not use these simulations as the theory model? Well, for one main reason, if we want to explore the full parameter space comprised in the standard model, we need thousands of such simulations, and they are terribly computationally expensive. We wouldn't be able to do it in years! In this talk, I will tell you how in the last few years we have come up with a way to circumvent this problem.
	Abstract
	Abstract
We introduce the strong CP problem and the existence of the Axion as a possible solution.
We discuss the possibility that axions are the dark matter of the Universe and the possible ways to
detect it or disprove it using: direct laboratory experiments as well as astrophysical and cosmological
	Abstract
Bosonic ultra-light dark matter (ULDM) in the mass range m ~ $10^{-22} - 10^{-21} \rm eV$ has been invoked as a motivated candidate with new input for the small-scale `puzzles' of cold dark matter. Numerical simulations show that these models form cored density distributions at the center of galaxies ('solitons'). These works also found an empirical scaling relation between the mass of the large-scale host halo and the mass of the central soliton. We show that this relation predicts that the peak circular velocity of the outskirts of the galaxy should approximately repeat itself in the central region. Contrasting this prediction to the measured rotation curves of well-resolved near-by galaxies, we show that ULDM in the mass range m ~ $10^{-22} - 10^{-21} \rm eV$ is in tension with the data.
	Abstract
Cosmological and astrophysical experimental data demark a large share of the limits of our knowledge in fundamental physics. I'll review two pieces of evidence of our ignorance: the nature of dark matter and the generation of baryon asymmetry in the universe, together with some of the proposed solutions to each. Finally, a novel connection between the two open problems will be presented.
	Abstract
The expansion of the Universe is in an accelerated phase. This
acceleration was first estabilished by observations of SuperNovae, and
has since been confirmed through a range of independent observations.
The physical cause of this acceleration is coined Dark Energy, and
most observations indicate that Einsteins cosmological constant
provides a very good fit. In that case, approximately 70% of the
energy of the Universe presently consists of this cosmological
constant.
I will in this talk address the possibility that there may exist other
possible causes of the observed acceleration. In particular will I
discuss a concrete model, inspired by the well-known Lorentz force in
electromagnetism, where Dark Matter causes the acceleration.  With a
fairly simple numerical simulation we find that the model appears
consistent with all observations.
In such a model, where Dark Matter properties causes the acceleration
of the Universe, there is no need for a cosmological constant.
	Abstract
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