Title: 1446 Introductory Astronomy II Chapter 18A
1 1446 Introductory Astronomy IIChapter 18A
- Cosmology I
- R. S. Rubins
Fall, 2009
2(No Transcript)
3Prologue 1
- Cosmologists are addressing some of the problems
that people attempted to resolve over the
centuries through philosophical thinking, but we
are doing so on systematic observation and
quantitative methodology. - As citizens of the universe we cannot help but
wonder how the first sources of light formed, how
life came into existence, and whether we are
alone as intelligent beings in this vast space. - Abraham Loeb in Scientific American, Nov. 2006
4Prologue 2
- What makes modern cosmology an empirical science
is that we are literally able to peer into the
pastcosmologists do not need to guess how the
universe evolved we can watch its history
through telescopes. - We have a snapshot of the universe as it was
400,000 years after the big bang as well as
pictures of individual galaxies a billion years
later. - Abraham Loeb in Scientific American, Nov. 2006
5A Simplified Chronology 1
- Cosmology is the study of the origin, structure
and evolution of the universe - ca. 300 BCE
- Aristarchus proposes a Sun-centered universe,
after deducing that the Sun is appreciably larger
than the Earth. - 1530
- Copernicus revives the heliocentric universe.
- 1610 1632
- Galileo makes the first telescopic
observations of the Sun, planets and the milky
way, and later publishes a book supporting the
Copernican model.
6A Simplified Chronology 2
- 1666 1687
- Newton introduces his Laws of Motion and
Theory of gravity. - He believed that the universe was infinite
and static, with every star held in place by
a uniform gravitational pull from all sides. - Without the tools needed to apply his equations
to very complicated systems, he invoked the
idea of intelligent design in writing - This most beautiful system of the sun,
planets and comets, could only proceed from the
counsel and dominion of an intelligent and
powerful Being - Now, with high-powered computers, the structure
of the solar system can be calculated by physics
alone, without assuming the help of a powerful
Being.
7A Simplified Chronology 3
- 1755
- Kant and Wright separately propose that the
Sun is part of a larger universe of stars. - 1823
- Olbers paradox why is the night sky dark?
- For an infinite universe, every line-of-site
should meet a star. - 1845
- Lord Rosse constructs the worlds largest
telescope in Ireland, and identifies island
nebulae.
8A Simplified Chronology 4
- 1905
- Einstein introduces the special theory of
relativity, which shows the following - i. that we live in four-dimensional
universe, with space and time are linked
inextricably - ii. the speed of light is the limiting velocity
at which matter and energy can travel - mass is a form of energy, given by E mc2.
- 1912
- Henrietta Leavitt discovers the relationship
between luminosity and period for Cepheid
variables, thus extending distance measurements
well beyond the range of the parallax method.
9A Simplified Chronology 5
- 1915
- Einstein introduces his General Theory of
Relativity, which superseded Newtons theory of
gravity, and could be applied to ultra-strong
gravity and objects traveling at speeds close to
c. - 1917
- Believing in a static universe, Einstein
introduced a repulsive anti-gravity force, termed
the cosmological constant, since without it, his
calculations showed that a static universe
immediately began to contract. - By studying the orbits of globular clusters,
Shapley deduces that the Sun is far from the
center of our universe. - 1920
- Shapley Curtis debate are island nebulae
small objects within our universe (Shapley) or
island universes beyond our universe (Curtis)?
10A Simplified Chronology 6
- 1922
- Friedman (1922) and Lemaitre (1927)
independently deduced that Einsteins general
theory of relativity could lead to an expanding
universe. - 1924
- Hubble applied Leavitts relationship for
Cepheid variables to show that Curtis was
correct showing (for example) that Andromeda is
a separate galaxy, outside the Milky Way. - 1927
- Humason, a former Minnesotan mule driver,
working with Hubble, discovered Hubbles Law,
which states that the recessional velocities of
galaxies are proportional to their distances from
us.
11A Simplified Chronology 7
- 1927
- Lemaitre deduced that the universe must have
evolved from a smaller and denser state. - Three years before his death in 1955,
Einstein told George Gamow that his cosmological
constant was the greatest blunder of his life. - The connection of Hubbles Law with Einsteins
general theory of relativity lead to its
reinterpretation as a cosmological redshift
i.e., an expansion of space itself, rather than
aDoppler effect, which describes the motion of
objects in a fixed space). - 1934
- Following the discovery of the neutron by
Chadwick and the prediction of the neutron star
by Landau, both in 1932, Zwicky and Baade
suggested independently that the most luminous
novae were supernovae, with neutron stars at
their centers.
12A Simplified Chronology 8
- 1948-9
- Gamow suggested that we should be able to
observe the remnant of the intensely hot
radiation emitted at the Big Bang, while Alpher
and Herman suggested this radiation should now be
at about 5K, giving thermal radiation in the
microwave range. - Hoyle (who gave the Big Bang its name), Bondi and
Gold proposed a rival steady-state theory, in
which matter is continually receding, with new
matter being created to replace it. - 1960s
- Penzias and Wilson at Bell labs realized that
apparent noise, occurring in their
measurements with a sensitive microwave antenna
designed for satellite communications, was in
fact the radiation from the Big Bang.
13A Simplified Chronology 9
- 1980s
- Vera Rubin and Ford found overwhelming
evidence in favor of the existence of dark
matter. - 1989-1994
- A NASA satellite, the Cosmic Background
Explorer (COBE), showed that the cosmic microwave
background radiation (CMB), fits a thermal
spectrum at 2.73 K (exactly). - 2003
- Measurements of Type Ia supernovae indicated
that the rate of expansion of the universe has
been increasing in the last 5 billion years,
indicating the presence of dark energy, an
anti-gravity force, related to Einsteins
cosmological constant.
14The Cosmological Principle
- At the very largest scales (over distances of
about a billion ly), the universe appears to be - i. homogeneous (the same at all places)
- ii. isotropic (the same in all directions at any
point). - The cosmological principle implies that there is
- i. no edge to the universe
- ii. no center to the universe.
- The proponents of the discredited steady state
universe (Hoyl et al.), believed in a universe
(on the largest scales) that was independent of
time. - An additional assumption, continually being
tested, is that physical theories are unchanged
over time and space.
15A Universe, Finite and Unbounded
- We imagine 2-dimensional objects on a
2-dimensional surface. - While all the coins move away from each other as
the surface expands, the sizes of the coins do
not change because of the strong EM forces
holding each coin together.
16Cosmological Redshift
- As the balloon expands, the wavelength of an EM
signal increases i.e. it is redshifted. - The further away the emitting source, the more
the received signal will be redshifted.
17Doppler Redshift vs Cosmological Redshift
18COBE Data Fits T 2.73 K
From 1989 to 1994, a precise value of 2.73 K for
the cosmic microwave background (CMB) was
obtained with a far IR spectrometer on the
COBE satellite.
19Motion of the Milky Way 2
- More precise measurements made by COBE showed
temperature variations of up to 3 mK, with the
warmer region in the direction of Leo and the
cooler region in the direction of Aquarius,
indicating Doppler effects.
20Motion of the Milky Way 1
- The COBE measurements showed that the Earth is
moving towards Leo at about 380 km/s. - Taking into account the motion of the Sun around
the galactic center, astronomers deduced that the
Milky Way Galaxy is moving at 600 km/s relative
to the CMB.
21Ripples in the Background Radiation 1
- To produce the sudsy structure of galactic
clusters and observed in the universe,
cosmological models predicted that there should
have been tiny ripples in the temperature of the
CMB before the appearance of stars. - The lead investigators of the COBE scientific
team, George Smoot and John Mather, made the
first measurements of the ripples, and shared the
2006 Nobel Prize in physics. - Improved measurements were made with specialized
telescopes, on the ground and in balloons flying
high above Antarctica, but the most extensive
investigations were those of the Wilkinson
Microwave Anisotropy Probe (WMAP), which was an
orbiting robotic infra-red telescope. - The ripples in the 3K CMB were found to be
roughly10 µK (one hundred thousandths of a
degree).
22The Boomerang Experiment, 1998
- Following circumpolar winds at almost 40 km
above Antarctica for 10 days, microwave detectors
cooled to 0.3 K obtained images 40 times sharper
than COBE.
23Ripples in the CMB
- In the map of the sky after 5 years of collecting
WMAP data, the red regions are warmer than
average, and the blue regions cooler, by about 3
x 105 K. - The warmer regions are slightly denser, because
gravitational collapse causes heating.
24Ripples and Q
- The tiny temperature ripples in the WMAP figure
are of fundamental importance, because they are
the origins of the galaxies formed over a million
years later. - The density contrasts observed in the WMAP figure
are amplified during the expansion of the
universe, because the gravitational force slows
the expansion of the denser regions. - The symbol Q 105 represents the size of the
temperature ripples compared to the absolute
temperature (3 K) of the CMB. - If applied to a sphere the size of the Earth, it
would be equivalent to ripples on the Earths
surface of less than the length of a football
field, which is another way of justifying the
cosmological assumption of homogeneity.
25Development of Structures
- The pictures show a computer simulation of how
structures emerge in an expanding universe. - For practical reasons, the expansion has been
subtracted out, so that the boxes remain the same
size. - During expansion, the denser regions expand more
and more slowly, compared to less dense regions,
so that the density contrasts grow.
26Galactic Distributions
27Questions about Big-Bang Theory
- 1. Was the Big Bang an explosion in previously
empty space? - 2. What happened before the Big Bang?
- 3. Do the restrictions of Einsteins Special
Theory of Relativity mean that galaxies cannot
recede faster than c, the speed of light in free
space. - 4. Does the expansion of the universe cause
everything within it to grow proportionately in
size? - 5. Do those measurements, which show the
universe to be about 13.7 billion years old, mean
that the radius of the observable part of the
universe is 13.7 light years?
28Misconceptions Answered
- 1. The big bang did not occur at a point in
space rather, space itself came into existence
with the big bang. - 2. There was no before the big bang time
itself, along with space and matter came into
being with the big bang. - 3. The limiting speed c of special relativity
applies to the motion of matter or energy through
space, but not to the expansion of space itself. - 4. Because of the gravitational forces between
them, the sizes of planets, stars, galaxies, and
their clusters remain unchanged by the expansion
of space. - 5. By the time a signal reaches us from a
distant galaxy, it will be much further away
because of the expansion of space.
29Lookback Time 1
- The lookback time refers to the time when a
signal we see today was emitted by its source.