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Olber's Paradox and the Distant Universe Robert Nemiroff Michigan Tech U. Physics X: About This Course • Officially "Extraordinary Concepts in Physics" • Being taught for credit at Michigan Tech o Light on math, heavy on concepts o Anyone anywhere is welcome • No textbook required o Wikipedia, web links, and lectures only o Find all the lectures with Google at: "Starship Asterisk" then "Physics X" o http://bb.nightskylive.net/asterisk/viewforum.php?f=39 Considering Our Universe as a Whole • The Cosmological Principle o Universe Homogeneous & Isotropic • Homogeneous o o Smooth when averaged out Example: jello, even fruity jello • Isotropic o o Same in every direction Example: room with the lights out Olber’s Paradox • Why is the sky dark at night? o Why is it bright during the day? • Assume the universe is infinite • Assume stars all have the same surface brightness o Surface brightness does not depend on distance Olber’s Paradox • Point in any direction • That direction goes through empty space but ends on a star • Every direction should be as bright as the surface of a star • The sky should be bright at night • What’s wrong with this picture? http://hyperphysics.phy-astr.gsu.edu/Hbase/astro/imgast/olbers.gif Dense Forest Analogy • • • • Picture you are in a dense forest Trees are found in every direction Every direction you point ends on a tree Therefore, every direction is tree-bark brown Olber’s Paradox: Possible Solutions • • • • Universe is finite in size Universe is finite in age Dust blocks out most light Light gets too redshifted to see • Which do you think is correct? o Take a minute to think about it! Olber’s Paradox: Solution • All of those have some affect BUT • The finite age of the universe is the most important factor • Light just can’t get to us from distant stars The Sky IS bright at night • Background radiations in all energy bands • The sky is never completely dark at any wavelength • Olber was correct after all! COBE All-Sky Map Credit: COBE Project, DMR, NASA APOD: 2006 October 7 Our Dusty Universe Credit: DIRBE Team, COBE, NASA APOD: 2000 November 19 The Cosmic Infrared Background Credit: A. Kashlinsky (SSAI) & S. Odenwald (Raytheon), 2MASS, NSF, NASA APOD: 2002 February 6 ROSAT Explores The X-Ray Sky Credit: S. Digel and S. Snowden (USRA/ LHEA/ GSFC), ROSAT Project, MPE, NASA APOD: 2000 August 19