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Expansion of the Universe
• Natural consequence of the basic field equations
of the General Theory of Relativity (GTR) • When GTR was first developed in the 1920s, everyone thought the Universe was static • Albert Einstein’s static solution: He arbitrarily introduced a cosmological constant Λ (later called it his “greatest blunder”) • Edwin Hubble’s observations of receding galaxies led to the discovery that the Universe is expanding • Hubble’s law: v = H0 d — where H0 ~ 70 km/s/Mpc (Hubble constant) Hubble’s Law Nature of the Universal Expansion • Hubble’s law implies the Universe is expanding uniformly • Expansion of Universe can be thought of as the expansion of space itself • Observed redshift of distant galaxies — wavelength of photons “stretched” by the expansion of space • Not everything is expanding — if it were, we couldn’t detect the expansion since our rulers would be expanding in proportion to everything else in the Universe The Big Bang • Reverse extrapolation of Universal expansion → There must have been an instant of infinite density and temperature → The BIG BANG!
• Phrase “Big Bang” was derisively coined by Fred
Hoyle, but the name stuck!
• It was not like an explosion: it happened everywhere!
• Universe has a finite age: t ~ 1 / H0
• We are not allowed to ask the question:
What happened before the Big Bang? The Future of the Universe • Is the expansion slowing down (i.e., decelerating) because of the mutual gravitational attraction of all the matter in the Universe? …….or……. • Is the expansion speeding up (i.e., accelerating) because of a repulsive anti-gravity force (analogous to Einstein’s cosmological constant Λ? • One of the most exciting developments of the last decade is the discovery that the Universal expansion rate is actually ACCELERATING! Dark Matter and Dark Energy • Critical density of matter needed to barely halt the Universe’s expansion: ρcrit ~ 10-30 g/cm3 • Most of the matter in the Universe is DARK — total density of matter in the Universe ρ may or may not be equal to this critical density: Ωmatter ≡ ρ / ρcrit • How much DARK ENERGY (anti-gravity) is present in the Universe? • Determination of Ωmatter and ΩΛ are major goals / achievements of modern cosmology • Methods: Density/dynamics of galaxies in the Universe Geometrical properties of the Universe Expansion rate in the Universe’s past Search for dark matter particles / physical origin of dark energy Olbers’ Paradox: Why is the Night Sky Dark? • Assume uniform and infinite distribution of stars — night sky should be infinitely bright(!), but is observed to be dark • Paradox phrased by Olbers in 1823, though already well known for about a hundred years at the time • Stars are distributed over a finite volume (our Galaxy, for example) but the argument can be extended to the distribution of individual galaxies • Can absorption by dust in galaxies solve the paradox? NO! Dust would heat up and glow as a black body radiator • Universe has finite age t → observable Universe has a horizon at a finite distance ct — this is the most important factor in solving Olbers’ Paradox! Alternative to Big Bang theory: Steady State Cosmology • Cosmological Principle: Universe is homogenous and isotropic — the same everywhere in space • Perfect Cosmological Principle: Universe is the same at all times also — our Universe probably does not obey the Perfect Cosmological Principle • Steady State theory proposed as alternative to Big Bang by Bondi, Gold, & Hoyle in 1940s — a theory is based on Perfect Cosmological Principle • Requires that galaxies constantly be created at the expense of energy out of the so-called C-field • Not widely believed — discovery of the Cosmic Microwave Background Radiation is considered definitive evidence against Steady State cosmology Cosmic Microwave Background Radiation (CMBR) • Relic of the Big Bang (“afterglow” of initial fireball) predicted in late 1940s • Discovered by Penzias & Wilson in 1965 — they won the Nobel Prize for this discovery • CMBR studied in detail by satellites (COBE, WMAP) • Radiation comes from era of decoupling of matter and radiation in the early Universe (~300,000 years old) when neutral H atoms first formed Observations of the CMBR • CMBR very smooth — photons from different directions have the same properties • Earth’s motion with respect to the CMBR is detectable — one half of sky hotter by one part in 1000 • Satellite observations detected tiny fluctuations in CMBR (1 part in 100,000) that represent seeds of density fluctuations from which galaxies arose