3a03 – gr and cosmology ralph pudritz dept. of physics & astronomy mcmaster university

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3A03 – GR and Cosmology Ralph Pudritz Dept. of Physics & Astronomy McMaster University

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Page 1: 3A03 – GR and Cosmology Ralph Pudritz Dept. of Physics & Astronomy McMaster University

3A03 – GR and Cosmology

Ralph Pudritz

Dept. of Physics & Astronomy

McMaster University

Page 2: 3A03 – GR and Cosmology Ralph Pudritz Dept. of Physics & Astronomy McMaster University

Hubble Space Telescope – time machine

This telescope has enabled our deepest probe at optical wavelengths, of the cosmos – the Hubble “deep field”.

Page 3: 3A03 – GR and Cosmology Ralph Pudritz Dept. of Physics & Astronomy McMaster University

Looking back in time – galaxies long ago

This image, consists entirely of galaxies. Very faint ones are at cosmological distances:-smaller and “blotchier” than galaxies at present.-Evidence for for galactic evolution over cosmic time.

Page 4: 3A03 – GR and Cosmology Ralph Pudritz Dept. of Physics & Astronomy McMaster University

Mapping where galaxies are – “large scale structure”

Da Costa et al (1994)

(Center for Astrophysics survey )

- 9,325 galaxies shown

- The largest structure yet seen: the “Great Wall”.

Page 5: 3A03 – GR and Cosmology Ralph Pudritz Dept. of Physics & Astronomy McMaster University

Coma - cluster of galaxies

Page 6: 3A03 – GR and Cosmology Ralph Pudritz Dept. of Physics & Astronomy McMaster University

THE EXPANDING UNIVESE Edwin Hubble:

1889 - 1953

At the 48 inch on Mt. Palomar

Page 7: 3A03 – GR and Cosmology Ralph Pudritz Dept. of Physics & Astronomy McMaster University

Cepheid variable stars – measuring distances to other galaxies

Page 8: 3A03 – GR and Cosmology Ralph Pudritz Dept. of Physics & Astronomy McMaster University

Hubble Diagram (1929): galaxies move apart!

Page 9: 3A03 – GR and Cosmology Ralph Pudritz Dept. of Physics & Astronomy McMaster University

Galaxies move away from us - the same for observers in any other galaxy…

Page 10: 3A03 – GR and Cosmology Ralph Pudritz Dept. of Physics & Astronomy McMaster University

Albert Einstein – General Relativity

Page 11: 3A03 – GR and Cosmology Ralph Pudritz Dept. of Physics & Astronomy McMaster University

Fate of the universe - depends on how dense it is…

Page 12: 3A03 – GR and Cosmology Ralph Pudritz Dept. of Physics & Astronomy McMaster University

Geometry of the universe in four dimensions….

Closed Universe Critical Open Universe

(sphere) (flat) (saddle)

Page 13: 3A03 – GR and Cosmology Ralph Pudritz Dept. of Physics & Astronomy McMaster University

Discovery of microwave radiation – blackbody at 2.7o K

Page 14: 3A03 – GR and Cosmology Ralph Pudritz Dept. of Physics & Astronomy McMaster University

COBE satellite – mapping the CMBR

Page 15: 3A03 – GR and Cosmology Ralph Pudritz Dept. of Physics & Astronomy McMaster University

COBE map: temperature of universe 2.735 deg above absolute zero - image shows slight “dipole” Dpppler shift, picking out our direction of motion

Page 16: 3A03 – GR and Cosmology Ralph Pudritz Dept. of Physics & Astronomy McMaster University

Cosmic Microwave Background Radiation - temperature fluctuations (one part in 105 )

Page 17: 3A03 – GR and Cosmology Ralph Pudritz Dept. of Physics & Astronomy McMaster University

Inflation – making the universe flat

Cosmic Microwave background radiation is surprisingly smooth – universe probably “inflated” incredibly rapidly from one tiny little region.

Page 18: 3A03 – GR and Cosmology Ralph Pudritz Dept. of Physics & Astronomy McMaster University

The expanding, cooling universe

Page 19: 3A03 – GR and Cosmology Ralph Pudritz Dept. of Physics & Astronomy McMaster University

THE ORIGINS OF STRUCTRE IN THE UNIVERSE

How did galaxies form?

- Density fluctuations infinitesimal in size, originate from quantum fluctuations in spacetime soon after the Big Bang.

- These are seen in fluctuations in CMBR – baby photo of galaxies!