Astrophysics and Cosmology Research at the Jodrell Bank Centre for Astrophysics 2023-2026
Lead Research Organisation:
University of Manchester
Department Name: Physics and Astronomy
Abstract
This grant supports the research of the Jodrell Bank Centre for Astrophysics at the University of Manchester. Our research is a divided into 3 groups. There are too many specific proposals to describe in detail, do below we have given a brief layman's explanation of the work being carried out by the three groups.
Cosmology: This is the study of the Universe as a whole. The main aim is to understand the processes by which the large scale feature of the Universe formed and to constrain the various different kinds of matter that existed within it. These include dark matter and dark energy which are thought to constitute more than 95% of the total. We do this by comparison to observations of weak and strong gravitational lensing which is the distortion of light predicted to be caused by massive objects in Einstein' Theory of General Relativity, the cosmic microwave background which is the faint emission of radiation created at the time when protons and electrons come together to form hydrogen and the emission given off by neutral hydrogen atoms in galaxies. The research we propose here involves both theory and observation as well as the development of the technology necessary to make the observations possible.
Pulsars and Time Domain Astrophysics: The focus of this group is astrophysical signatures that are changing with time - signals which go on and off, often with some kind of regularity. These include Pulsars which are a non-standard star type, known as a neutron star, which is a dead star supported by the quantum pressure of neutrons. The radio emission from these objects pulses on an off with extraordinary regularity allowing them to acts cosmic clocks. The constantly measuring these clocks as the neutron stars spin and move through space, often impacted on by a companion star, allows the most precise constraints on the nature of gravity outside the solar system. Other phenomena studied by this group include Nova explosions, other variable stars, and variability induced by the lensing effects of one star passing in front of another, called microlensing.
Sun, Stars and Galaxies: The researchers in this group study a wide range of astrophysical processes that are reasonable for the formation and evolution of the objects in the name of the group. Specific key areas that the group is interested in are the formation of stars much larger than the Sun and the subsequent evolution, the properties of the so-called interstellar medium (ISM) which comprises molecules not bound to stars and the magnetic fields that permeate space.
Cosmology: This is the study of the Universe as a whole. The main aim is to understand the processes by which the large scale feature of the Universe formed and to constrain the various different kinds of matter that existed within it. These include dark matter and dark energy which are thought to constitute more than 95% of the total. We do this by comparison to observations of weak and strong gravitational lensing which is the distortion of light predicted to be caused by massive objects in Einstein' Theory of General Relativity, the cosmic microwave background which is the faint emission of radiation created at the time when protons and electrons come together to form hydrogen and the emission given off by neutral hydrogen atoms in galaxies. The research we propose here involves both theory and observation as well as the development of the technology necessary to make the observations possible.
Pulsars and Time Domain Astrophysics: The focus of this group is astrophysical signatures that are changing with time - signals which go on and off, often with some kind of regularity. These include Pulsars which are a non-standard star type, known as a neutron star, which is a dead star supported by the quantum pressure of neutrons. The radio emission from these objects pulses on an off with extraordinary regularity allowing them to acts cosmic clocks. The constantly measuring these clocks as the neutron stars spin and move through space, often impacted on by a companion star, allows the most precise constraints on the nature of gravity outside the solar system. Other phenomena studied by this group include Nova explosions, other variable stars, and variability induced by the lensing effects of one star passing in front of another, called microlensing.
Sun, Stars and Galaxies: The researchers in this group study a wide range of astrophysical processes that are reasonable for the formation and evolution of the objects in the name of the group. Specific key areas that the group is interested in are the formation of stars much larger than the Sun and the subsequent evolution, the properties of the so-called interstellar medium (ISM) which comprises molecules not bound to stars and the magnetic fields that permeate space.
Organisations
Publications
Rashid M
(2024)
CMB polarization signal demodulation with a rotating half-wave plate
in Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society
Zegeye D
(2023)
CMB-S4 forecasts for constraints on f NL through µ -distortion anisotropy
in Physical Review D
Ubertosi F
(2025)
Cocoon shock, X-ray cavities, and extended inverse Compton emission in Hercules A: Clues from Chandra observations
in Astronomy & Astrophysics
Lunde J
(2024)
COMAP Pathfinder - Season 2 results I. Improved data selection and processing
in Astronomy & Astrophysics
Stutzer N
(2024)
COMAP Pathfinder - Season 2 results II. Updated constraints on the CO(1-0) power spectrum
in Astronomy & Astrophysics
Chung D
(2024)
COMAP Pathfinder - Season 2 results III. Implications for cosmic molecular gas content at z ~ 3
in Astronomy & Astrophysics
Acharya S
(2024)
Constraining broad photon spectrum injections from exotic and astrophysical sources
in Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society
Thomas D
(2024)
Constraining Post-Newtonian Parameters with the Cosmic Microwave Background
in Journal of Cosmology and Astroparticle Physics
Smarra C
(2024)
Constraints on conformal ultralight dark matter couplings from the European Pulsar Timing Array
in Physical Review D
Garrett M
(2023)
Constraints on extragalactic transmitters via Breakthrough Listen observations of background sources
in Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society
Cyr B
(2023)
Constraints on the spectral signatures of superconducting cosmic strings
in Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society
Hanmer K
(2025)
Contemporaneous optical-radio observations of a fast radio burst in a close galaxy pair
in Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society
Tohfa H
(2024)
Cosmic microwave background search for fine-structure constant evolution
in Physical Review D
Cyr B
(2024)
Cosmic string solution to the radio synchrotron background
in Physical Review D
Srinivasan S
(2024)
Cosmological gravity on all scales. Part III. Non-linear matter power spectrum in phenomenological modified gravity
in Journal of Cosmology and Astroparticle Physics
Lucca M
(2024)
CRRfast : an emulator for the cosmological recombination radiation with effects from inhomogeneous recombination
in Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society
Toribio San Cipriano L
(2024)
Dark Energy Survey Deep Field photometric redshift performance and training incompleteness assessment
in Astronomy & Astrophysics
Abbott T
(2023)
Dark Energy Survey Year 3 results: Constraints on extensions to ? CDM with weak lensing and galaxy clustering
in Physical Review D
Zhang Y
(2024)
Dark Energy Survey Year 6 results: Intra-cluster light from redshift 0.2 to 0.5
in Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society
Abbott T
(2024)
Dark Energy Survey: A 2.1% measurement of the angular baryonic acoustic oscillation scale at redshift z eff = 0.85 from the final dataset
in Physical Review D
Mena-Fernández J
(2024)
Dark Energy Survey: Galaxy sample for the baryonic acoustic oscillation measurement from the final dataset
in Physical Review D
Lynch G
(2024)
DESI observations and the Hubble tension in light of modified recombination
in Physical Review D
Bom C
(2024)
Designing an Optimal Kilonova Search Using DECam for Gravitational-wave Events
in The Astrophysical Journal
