Title: Beyond the Big Bang
1Lecture 10 Beyond the Big Bang
Big Bang
Is the Big Bang the last word?
2Problems with the Big Bang
- The Flatness Problem
- The Horizon Problem
- The Structure Problem
- The Monopole Problem
- The Hierarchy Problem
- The Gravity Problem
Beyond the Big Bang
Is the Big Bang the last word?
3Problems with the Big Bang
At the present time, the density parameter is
close to 1
Beyond the Big Bang
O0 1.0 0.02
At earlier times, the variation of the density
parameter from 1 gets less. For example, at the
time of nucleosynthesis
- The Flatness Problem
- The Horizon Problem
- The Structure Problem
- The Monopole Problem
- The Hierarchy Problem
- The Gravity Problem
Onuc 1.0 10-14
At the Planck time 5X10-44 sec the density
parameter is extremely close to 1
OPlanck 1.0 10-60
Is there a natural explanation for something in
nature being this closely balanced?
4Problems with the Big Bang
2. The Horizon Problem
Horizon
Surface of last scatter
Beyond the Big Bang
- The Flatness Problem
- The Horizon Problem
- The Structure Problem
- The Monopole Problem
- The Hierarchy Problem
- The Gravity Problem
Corresponds to about 2 degrees of arc today.
How can the CMB be so uniform when points on it
more than 2 degrees apart are out of contact with
each other?
5Problems with the Big Bang
3. The Structure Problem
Beyond the Big Bang
- The Flatness Problem
- The Horizon Problem
- The Structure Problem
- The Monopole Problem
- The Hierarchy Problem
- The Gravity Problem
What produced the large-scale structure in the
universe and the temperature fluctuations in the
CBR?
6Problems with the Big Bang
4. The Monopole Problem
e-
The electron is an electric monopole
Beyond the Big Bang
A magnet is a magnetic dipole
- The Flatness Problem
- The Horizon Problem
- The Structure Problem
- The Monopole Problem
- The Hierarchy Problem
- The Gravity Problem
X
X
If you break a magnet in two, do you get magnetic
monopoles?
No! You get two smaller magnetic dipoles!
But can magnetic monopoles exist?
Maybe. If the universe has GUTS?
Diversion to elementary particle physics ?
7The Standard Model for Elementary Particle Physics
Leptons
Quarks
2/3 -1/3 -1 0
Quicky Survey of Elementary Particle Physics
I II III
Bosons Fermions
8The Standard Model for Elementary Particle Physics
The Four Fundamental Forces of Nature
Quicky Survey of Elementary Particle Physics
highest lab energy
grand unification?
room temperature
9The Standard Model for Elementary Particle Physics
Grand Unification
Quicky Survey of Elementary Particle Physics
10Supersymmetry
Quicky Survey of Elementary Particle Physics
11Problems with the Big Bang
4. The Monopole Problem
e-
The electron is an electric monopole
Beyond the Big Bang
A magnet is a dipole
- The Flatness Problem
- The Horizon Problem
- The Structure Problem
- The Monopole Problem
- The Hierarchy Problem
- The Gravity Problem
If you break a magnet in two, do you get magnetic
monopoles?
No! You get two smaller magnets!
But can magnetic monopoles exist?
Maybe. If the universe has GUTS?
Grand Unification Theories (GUTS) predict
magnetic monopoles!
Where are the monopoles?
12Problems with the Big Bang
5. The Hierarchy Problem
Beyond the Big Bang
- The Flatness Problem
- The Horizon Problem
- The Structure Problem
- The Monopole Problem
- The Hierarchy Problem
- The Gravity Problem
GUTS predict that lower mass objects will have
their masses increased to GUT level energies!
Why such a huge gap between important energy
scales? And why arent elementary particles much
much heavier?
13Problems with the Big Bang
6. The Gravity Problem
Beyond the Big Bang
- The Flatness Problem
- The Horizon Problem
- The Structure Problem
- The Monopole Problem
- The Hierarchy Problem
- The Gravity Problem
Why is the Gravitational Force so weak?
14Possible Big Bang Solutions
- Inflation
- Supersymmetry
- Strings
- Branes
Beyond the Big Bang
15Inflation
Beyond the Big Bang
- The Flatness Problem
- The Horizon Problem
- The Structure Problem
- The Monopole Problem
- The Hierarchy Problem
- The Gravity Problem
16What is inflation?
- Inflation is a cosmological model in which the
observable Universe undergoes enormous increase
in size between about 10-35 and 10-32 seconds
after the Big Bang. - In that short time, the size of the observable
universe increases by a factor of about 1043. (It
has since expanded by another 1026) - Inflation is a modification of standard Big Bang
cosmology - It was originated by Alan Guth and modified by
several others. - Inflation is a prediction of grand unified
theories in particle physics that was applied to
cosmology it was not just invented to solve
problems in cosmology
Beyond the Big Bang
17Without inflation?
- At t10-35 s, the observable Universe expands
from about 1 cm to about 1028 cm today.
Beyond the Big Bang
18With inflation?
- At t10-35 s, the observable Universe expands
from about 10-42 cm to about 1028 cm today, while
the universe within the horizon expands from
about 10-25 cm to what it is today.
Beyond the Big Bang
1028 cm
10-42 cm
19Inflation
- How does inflation solve some of the Big Bang
problems? - It presumes another component other than
radiation or matter that dominates. This
component acts much like an early era
cosmological constant in that it causes an
acceleration of expansion. - With this component, an initial curvature
parameter not even nearly equal to 1 will rapidly
become equal to 1 as time progresses.
Beyond the Big Bang
- The Flatness Problem
- The Horizon Problem
- The Structure Problem
- The Monopole Problem
- The Hierarchy Problem
- The Gravity Problem
20Inflation
Beyond the Big Bang
- The Flatness Problem
- The Horizon Problem
- The Structure Problem
- The Monopole Problem
- The Hierarchy Problem
- The Gravity Problem
seconds
10-36
10-32
10-34
10-30
21Inflation
- How does inflation solve some of the Big Bang
problems? - It presumes another component other than
radiation or matter that dominates. This
component acts much like an early era
cosmological constant in that it causes an
acceleration of expansion. - With this component, an initial curvature
parameter not even nearly equal to 1 will rapidly
become equal to 1 as time progresses. - With this component, the surface of last scatter
(to be) is much smaller than the horizon (10-44 m
compared to 10-28 m), allowing the radiant energy
within the surface of last scatter to thoroughly
reach thermodynamic equilibrium, i.e, the same
temperature.
Beyond the Big Bang
- The Flatness Problem
- The Horizon Problem
- The Structure Problem
- The Monopole Problem
- The Hierarchy Problem
- The Gravity Problem
Horizon
Surface of last scatter
22Inflation
- How does inflation solve some of the Big Bang
problems? - It presumes another component other than
radiation or matter that dominates. This
component acts much like an early era
cosmological constant in that it causes an
acceleration of expansion. - With this component, an initial curvature
parameter not even nearly equal to 1 will rapidly
become equal to 1 as time progresses. - With this component, the surface of last scatter
(to be) is much smaller than the horizon (10-44 m
compared to 10-28 m), allowing the radiant energy
within the surface of last scatter to thoroughly
reach thermodynamic equilibrium, i.e, the same
temperature. - Large scale structure has its origins in tiny
quantum fluctuations in the energy distribution
before inflation.
Beyond the Big Bang
- The Flatness Problem
- The Horizon Problem
- The Structure Problem
- The Monopole Problem
- The Hierarchy Problem
- The Gravity Problem
23Inflation
- How does inflation solve some of the Big Bang
problems? - It presumes another component other than
radiation or matter that dominates. This
component acts much like an early era
cosmological constant in that it causes an
acceleration of expansion. - With this component, an initial curvature
parameter not even nearly equal to 1 will rapidly
become equal to 1 as time progresses. - With this component, the surface of last scatter
(to be) is much smaller than the horizon (10-44 m
compared to 10-28 m), allowing the radiant energy
within the surface of last scatter to thoroughly
reach thermodynamic equilibrium, i.e, the same
temperature. - Large scale structure has its origins in tiny
quantum fluctuations in the energy distribution
before inflation. - Grand unification energies (temperature) existed
before and during inflation and many monopoles
were created. But their density diminished to an
imperceptible level by the end of the
inflationary period by which time GUT symmetry
was broken.
Beyond the Big Bang
- The Flatness Problem
- The Horizon Problem
- The Structure Problem
- The Monopole Problem
- The Hierarchy Problem
- The Gravity Problem
24Inflation
- How does inflation solve some of the Big Bang
problems? - The hierarchy problem is solved by Supersymmetry.
Beyond the Big Bang
- The Flatness Problem
- The Horizon Problem
- The Structure Problem
- The Monopole Problem
- The Hierarchy Problem
- The Gravity Problem
25Inflation
- How does inflation solve some of the Big Bang
problems? - The hierarchy problem is solved by Supersymmetry.
- The gravity problem may be solved by String
Theory.
Beyond the Big Bang
Next Lecture
- The Flatness Problem
- The Horizon Problem
- The Structure Problem
- The Monopole Problem
- The Hierarchy Problem
- The Gravity Problem