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Galaxy Evolution and Cosmology with the Square Kilometre Array

Abstract:
The present-day Universe is seemingly dominated by dark energy and dark matter, but mapping the normal (baryonic) content remains vital for both astrophysics - understanding how galaxies form - and astro-particle physics - inferring properties of the dark components. The Square Kilometre Array (SKA) will provide the only means of studying the cosmic evolution of neutral Hydrogen (HI) which, alongside information on star formation from the radio continuum, is needed to understand how stars formed from gas within dark-matter over-densities and the roles of gas accretion and galaxy merging. `All hemisphere' HI redshift surveys to redshift 1.5 are feasible with wide-field-of-view realizations of the SKA and, by measuring the galaxy power spectrum in exquisite detail, will allow the first precise studies of the equation-of-state of dark energy. The SKA will be capable of other uniquely powerful cosmological studies including the measurement of the dark-matter power spectrum using weak gravitational lensing, and the precise measurement of H0 using extragalactic water masers. The SKA is likely to become the premier dark-energy-measuring machine, bringing breakthroughs in cosmology beyond those likely to be made possible by combining CMB (e.g. Planck), optical (e.g. LSST, SNAP) and other early-21st-century datasets.
Publication status:
Published

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Publisher copy:
10.1016/j.newar.2004.09.024

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Journal:
New Astron.Rev. More from this journal
Volume:
48
Issue:
11-12
Pages:
1013-1027
Publication date:
2004-09-20
DOI:
ISSN:
1387-6473


Keywords:
Pubs id:
pubs:21631
UUID:
uuid:595906c4-df86-4cb2-a4cd-80b91ff6023a
Local pid:
pubs:21631
Source identifiers:
21631
Deposit date:
2012-12-19

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