chapter 22 the beginning of time

49
Chapter 22 The Beginning of Time

Upload: rosa

Post on 16-Feb-2016

46 views

Category:

Documents


0 download

DESCRIPTION

Chapter 22 The Beginning of Time . The Big Bang. Run the expansion of the universe backward in time and you reach the moment of the beginning (The term creation implies a metaphysical event.) This moment is now called the Big Bang. The beginning is tied to the ending by everything in between. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: Chapter 22 The Beginning of Time

Chapter 22The Beginning of Time

Page 2: Chapter 22 The Beginning of Time

The Big Bang

Run the expansion of the universe backward in time and you reach the moment of the beginning (The term creation implies a metaphysical event.)

This moment is now called the Big Bang.

The beginning is tied to the ending by everything in between.

So everything has to fit together here.

This is the subject of cosmology.

Page 3: Chapter 22 The Beginning of Time

What were conditions like in the early universe?

Page 4: Chapter 22 The Beginning of Time

The early universe must have been extremely hot and dense

Page 5: Chapter 22 The Beginning of Time

Photons converted into particle-antiparticle pairs and vice-versa

E = mc2

Early universe was full of particles and radiation because of its high temperature

Pair Production

Page 6: Chapter 22 The Beginning of Time

What is the history of the universe according to the Big

Bang theory?

Page 7: Chapter 22 The Beginning of Time

Planck Era

Before Planck time (~10-43 sec)

No theory of quantum gravity so we cannot yet describe this time.

Ended when gravity separated from GUT force

Page 8: Chapter 22 The Beginning of Time

Four known forces in universe:

Strong Force Electromagnetism

Weak Force

Gravity

Do forces unify at high temperatures?

Yes!(Electroweak)

Maybe (GUT)

Who knows?(String Theory)

Page 9: Chapter 22 The Beginning of Time

GUT Era

Lasts from Planck time (~10-

43 sec) to end of GUT force (~10-

38 sec)

Only slightly better understood than the Plank Era

Ends with inflation.

Page 10: Chapter 22 The Beginning of Time

Electroweak EraLasts from end of GUT force (~10-38 sec) to end of electroweak force (~10-10 sec)

We have created temps ~ to what existed at the end of the Electroweak Era inside of supercolliders.

First time we can recreate the conditions that might have been.

Page 11: Chapter 22 The Beginning of Time

Particle Era

Amounts of matter and antimatter nearly equal

Creation of subatomic particles.

(Roughly 1 extra proton for every 109 proton-antiproton pairs!)

Ends when pair production stops.

Page 12: Chapter 22 The Beginning of Time

Era of Nucleo-synthesis

Begins when matter annihilates remaining antimatter at ~ 0.001 sec

Nuclei begin to fuse

Composition of the normal matter in the universe set.75% Hydrogen25% Helium

Page 13: Chapter 22 The Beginning of Time

Era of Nuclei

To hot for electrons to bind to nuclei to create atoms.

Photons bounce between electrons being absorbed and reemitted. Opaque universe

Ends with the creation of atoms at 380,000 yrs and 3000K.

Page 14: Chapter 22 The Beginning of Time

Era of Atoms

Atoms form at age ~ 380,000 years

When atoms from the universe becomes transparent.

Background radiation released.

Page 15: Chapter 22 The Beginning of Time

Era of Galaxies

Galaxies form at age ~ 1 billion years

Page 16: Chapter 22 The Beginning of Time

Primary Evidence

1) We have detected the leftover radiation from the Big Bang.

2) The Big Bang theory correctly predicts the abundance of helium and other light elements.

Page 17: Chapter 22 The Beginning of Time

How do we observe the radiation left over from the Big Bang?

Page 18: Chapter 22 The Beginning of Time

The cosmic microwave background – the radiation left over from the Big Bang – was detected by Penzias & Wilson in 1965

Page 19: Chapter 22 The Beginning of Time

Background radiation from Big Bang has been freely streaming across universe since atoms formed at temperature ~ 3,000 K: visible/IR

Page 20: Chapter 22 The Beginning of Time

Expansion of universe has redshifted thermal radiation from that time to ~1000 times longer wavelength: microwaves

Background has perfect thermal radiation spectrum at temperature 2.73 K

Page 21: Chapter 22 The Beginning of Time

WMAP gives us detailed baby pictures of structure in the universe

Page 22: Chapter 22 The Beginning of Time

How do the abundances of elements support the Big Bang theory?

Page 23: Chapter 22 The Beginning of Time

Protons and neutrons combined to make long-lasting helium nuclei when universe was ~ 3 minutes old

Page 24: Chapter 22 The Beginning of Time

Big Bang theory prediction: 75% H, 25% He (by mass)

Matches observations of nearly primordial gases

Page 25: Chapter 22 The Beginning of Time

Abundances of other light elements agree with Big Bang model having 4.4% normal matter – more evidence for WIMPS!

Page 26: Chapter 22 The Beginning of Time

What aspects of the universe were originally unexplained with

the Big Bang theory?

Page 27: Chapter 22 The Beginning of Time

Mysteries Needing Explanation

1) Where does structure come from?

2) Why is the overall distribution of matter so uniform?

3) Why is the density of the universe so close to the critical density?

An early episode of rapid inflation can solve all three mysteries!

Page 28: Chapter 22 The Beginning of Time

Problems with the Classical, Decelerating Universe:1) The flatness problem:

Even a tiny deviation from perfect flatness at the time of the Big Bang should have been amplified to a huge deviation today.

=> Extreme fine tuning required!

The universe seems to be nearly flat.

Page 29: Chapter 22 The Beginning of Time

2) The Horizon Problem, The isotropy of the cosmic background:

If information can only travel through the universe at the speed of light, then structure in the cosmic background should not be correlated over large angular scales!

Þ Contradiction to almost perfect isotropy of the cosmic background!

Page 30: Chapter 22 The Beginning of Time

Inflation can make all the structure by stretching tiny quantum ripples to enormous size

These ripples in density then become the seeds for all structures

Page 31: Chapter 22 The Beginning of Time

How can microwave temperature be nearly identical on opposite sides of the sky?

Page 32: Chapter 22 The Beginning of Time

Regions now on opposite sides of the sky were close together before inflation pushed them far apart

Page 33: Chapter 22 The Beginning of Time

Inflation solves the horizon problem

They are in equilibrium because they were in contact to start.

Page 34: Chapter 22 The Beginning of Time

Overall geometry of the universe is closely related to total density of matter & energy

Density = Critical

Density > Critical

Density < Critical

Page 35: Chapter 22 The Beginning of Time

Inflation of universe flattens overall geometry like the inflation of a balloon, causing overall density of matter plus energy to be very close to critical density

Page 36: Chapter 22 The Beginning of Time

Inflation solves the flatness problem

A curved universe of large radius can not be distinguished from a flat universe.

The universe appears flat because it is precisely flat.

Page 37: Chapter 22 The Beginning of Time

How can we test the idea of inflation?

Page 38: Chapter 22 The Beginning of Time

Patterns of structure observed by WMAP show us the “seeds” of universe

Page 39: Chapter 22 The Beginning of Time

Observed patterns of structure in universe agree (so far) with the “seeds” that inflation would produce

Page 40: Chapter 22 The Beginning of Time

Fluctuations in the Cosmic Microwave Background

Angular size of the CMB fluctuations allows us to probe the geometry of space-time!

CMB fluctuations have a characteristic size of 1 degree.

Page 41: Chapter 22 The Beginning of Time

Analysis of the Cosmic Background Fluctuations

Universe has a flat geometry

Analyze frequency of occurrence of fluctuations on a particular angular scale

Page 42: Chapter 22 The Beginning of Time

 

BUT a flat universe means total density is exactly critical.

Result. Most of matter is dark matter. But most of cosmic density is not even matter.

“The best match to data is a critical-density universe comprising 27% matter (4% baryonic,23% dark) and 73% dark energy.

Page 43: Chapter 22 The Beginning of Time

Inferred from CMB

• Overall geometry is flat – Total mass+energy has critical density

• Ordinary matter ~ 4.4% of total• Total matter is ~ 27% of total

– Dark matter is ~ 23% of total– Dark energy is ~ 73% of total

• Age of 13.7 billion years

In excellent agreement with observations of present-day universe and models involving inflation and WIMPs!

Page 44: Chapter 22 The Beginning of Time

Why is the darkness of the night sky evidence for the Big Bang?

Page 45: Chapter 22 The Beginning of Time

Olbers’ Paradox

If universe were

1) infinite

2) unchanging

3) everywhere the same

Then, stars would cover the night sky

Page 46: Chapter 22 The Beginning of Time

Olbers’ Paradox

If universe were

1) infinite

2) unchanging

3) everywhere the same

Then, stars would cover the night sky

Page 47: Chapter 22 The Beginning of Time

Night sky is dark because the universe changes with time

As we look out in space, we can look back to a time when there were no stars

Page 48: Chapter 22 The Beginning of Time

Now if also infinite in spatial extension and infinite in lifetime.

Olber’s Paradox isn’t a paradox or Olber’s.

Thomas Digges, 1576

Kepler,1610;

Halley,1721

Solution by Edgar Allan Poe 1848. The universe isn’t infinitely old.

Olber’s Paradox

Page 49: Chapter 22 The Beginning of Time

Night sky is dark because the universe changes with time

As we look out in space, we can look back to a time when there were no stars