Chapter 6: Cosmology. The Universe and The Big Bang: V V V C V C V V V V
Chapter 6: Cosmology. The Universe and The Big Bang: V V V C V C V V V V
Chapter 6: Cosmology. The Universe and The Big Bang: V V V C V C V V V V
1. The picture that the Universe expands into a preexisting space like an
explosion is not correct.
2. The question “what was before the big bang?” does not make sense because
– Both space and time (spacetime) are part of the solution to Einstein’s
equation
– Both space and time are created in the big bang
Einstein’s General Relativity (GR) is the theory on which the big bang theory is
resting. GR is the modern “universal theory of gravitation”.
2D interval: s2 = x2 + y2 (Pithagoras) s
3D interval: s2 = x2 + y2 + z2 y
4D (spacetime) interval: s2 = x2 + y2 + z2 – c2 t2
x
More precisely: ds2 = dx2 + dy2 + dz2 – c2 dt2
(interval in the spacetime)
v1 + v2
Special (Einstein’s) relativity principle: v=
1 + (v1 / c) ⋅ (v2 / c)
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– it is a very clever formula. Even if v1 +v2 >c, the result, v, is always less or
equal to c (speed of light). Try to use this formula for v1 = c/2, v2 = c/2; and for
v1 = c, v2 = c/2.
1. suggested that gravity is nothing but a curvature of space (it is just a model,
but it works!)
Exact solution are known only for a very few simple cases. One of them is the
Alexander Friedmann’s solution for homogeneous and isotropic model of universe.
(Homogeneous: same in every place. Isotropic: same in all directions. We believe that
our Universe is both homogeneous and isotropic in a very large scale – greater than
the scale of a galactic cluster. ) This solution deals with a critical density: ρcrit .
Comparing real density of matter in the Universe, we can judge about geometry of the
space:
ρ >ρcrit: spherical geometry ρ =ρcrit: flat space ρ < ρcrit: hyperbolic geometry
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New Zealander Roy Kerr is the author of one of the most important (and famous)
solutions of Einstein’s GR equations – solution for a rotating black hole. Kerr’s
solution creates the foundation for the science of black holes. Roy Kerr is a Professor
of the University of Canterbury (Christchurch) and one of living legends of science.
He visited AUT several times in recent years.
Hubble’s Law
If the universe is expanding and cooling, the early universe must have been very
dense and hot. Then there has been a big bang. (Georgy Gamov, 1948)
Gamov: There was an optimum environment to breed the elements by nuclear fusion
Gamov: In order to form hydrogen and helium at the right proportions, the following
conditions are required:
– density: ρ ≈ 10-5 g/cm-3
– temperature: T ≈ 109 K
Radiation from this epoch should be observable as an isotropic background radiation.
Gamov: Due to the expansion of the universe to the modern ρ ≈ 3×10-30 g/cm3, the
temperature should have dropped to T ≈ 5 K (-268 C or -450 F).
Can we observe this radiation ? Penzias and Wilson (1965) discovered highly
isotropic Cosmic Microwave Background radiation (CMB). See Wikipedia.
No. Today’s Universe is homogeneous and isotropic on the largest scales, but there is
a fair amount of structure on small scales, such as galaxies, clusters of galaxies etc.
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