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Cosmology Physics 466E Olbers Paradox Cosmological principle Expansion of the Universe Big Bang Theory Steady State Model Dark Matter Dark Energy Structure Formation "The evolution of the world can be compared to a display of fireworks that has just ended; some few red wisps, ashes and smoke. Standing on a cooled cinder, we see the slow fading of the suns, and we try to recall the vanishing brilliance of the origin of the worlds." Lemaitre. Cosmological Principle • On large scales (greater than 100 Mpc) the Universe is homogenious and isotropic • The Earth is not at a preferred place (Copernican Principle) • Homogenious: Every point is equivalent • Isotropic: Every direction is equivalent Homogeneity does not imply isotropy Homogeneity does not imply isotropy Cosmological Principle (cont) Isotropy and Homogeneity • Homogeneous -> we see no difference when we change position; there is no preferred position in the universe (translational invariance) • Isotropic -> no difference when we look at a different direction • Examples: Surface of uniform cylinder is homogeneous but not isotropic- what about the surface of a sphere – or chessboard ? • Cosmological Principle (CP)-> universe is homogeneous and isotropic (at a given cosmological time) Cosmological Principle • Cosmological principle means that physical laws are assumed to be the same everywhere, too • The cosmological principle of isotropy and homogeneity, like other scientific hypotheses, is testable by confrontation with data. • So far, observations support this hypothesis. Tests Galaxies arranged in superclusters that appear as long sheets surrounded by voids Cosmological Principle Tested The Perfect Cosmological Principle Perfect Cosmological Principle • What about time? Every “time” equivalent? • The Universe is homogenious and isotropic in space and time. • The universe looks the same everywhere (on the large scale) as it always has and always will. • The evolution of Galaxies does not confirm this principle. The universe seems to evolve. Olbers’ Paradox (1826) • • • • Consider a static, infinite universe of stars Every line of sight would end in a star Then why isn't the night sky bright? Mathematically, radiative flux drops by r-2 but the number of stars in a volume increases with r3. • So the night sky should be bright if the Universe is sufficiently large! http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Olbers'_paradox Olbers’ Paradox Olbers’ Paradox • A star filled spherical shell, of radius r, and thickness dr, centered on the Earth. Possible Explanations • • • • • There's too much dust to see the distant stars. The Universe has only a finite number of stars. The distribution of stars is not uniform. So, for example, there could be an infinity of stars, but they hide behind one another so that only a finite angular area is subtended by them. The Universe is expanding, so distant stars are red-shifted into obscurity. The Universe is young. Distant light hasn't even reached us yet. http://math.ucr.edu/home/baez/physics/Relativity/GR/olbers.html Correct Answer(s) • The Universe is expanding • The Universe is young • In fact the sky is ablaze, but the temperature of the radiation is only 2.7 K (CMBR) • All starlight ever emitted amounts only to a few percent of the CMBR energy density. The Universe is young • We live inside a spherical shell of "Observable Universe" which has radius equal to the lifetime of the Universe. • Objects more than about 13.7 thousand million years old (the latest figure) are too far away for their light ever to reach us. • Redshift effect certainly contributes. But the finite age of the Universe is the most important effect. References: Wesson, 1991, ApJ. 367, 399 Other galaxies • Telescopic images of the night sky reveal many other galaxies – What do they look like? • are they all like the Milky Way? – Where are they? • spread randomly through space, or grouped? – What can we learn about the Universe? A long time ago in a galaxy far, far away... • How do we know these fuzzy blobs are distant galaxies? – some types of star (especially variable stars) have well-known intrinsic brightness – by measuring how bright they appear to be we can infer their distance – “standard candles” Types of galaxies • Galaxies seem to come in two basic types – smooth, featureless elliptical galaxies • circular or elongated • made of old, reddish stars – spiral galaxies like the Milky Way • some with round bulges, some with bars Hubble’s tuning fork old stars; no recent star formation E0 no spiral arms ••• E6 Sa Sb Sc Irregular S0 looser spiral arms —> smaller bulge —> SB0 more elongated —> old stars dwarf elliptical (dE/dSph) lots of young stars SBa SBb SBc old stars in bulge; younger in disc; youngest in spiral arms amorphous or disrupted Where do we fit in? • • • The Milky Way is clearly not an elliptical galaxy – it has a disc, and contains young stars It has spiral arms – so, not S0 – size of bulge and arm pattern suggest Sbc • between Sb and Sc There is evidence for a small bar – SBbc, or SABbc • SAB means intermediate between barred and unbarred The Local Group • The Milky Way is not alone: it is part of a small group containing – M31 (the Andromeda galaxy) • a large Sb spiral, bigger than us – M33 • a small Sc spiral – the Large Magellanic Cloud • an irregular satellite of the Milky Way – at least 30 dwarf irregular and dwarf elliptical galaxies – but no large elliptical galaxies Galaxy groups and clusters • The Local Group is small: some rich clusters contain thousands of large galaxies – elliptical and S0/SB0 galaxies are much more common in rich clusters – spiral and irregular galaxies are much more common in small groups and the outskirts of clusters Galaxy properties • Elliptical galaxies – contain old stars – have little net rotation • star orbits are randomly directed, as in our halo – have little internal structure – are much more common in galaxy-rich environments – include the most massive galaxies (but also some with very low mass) • Spiral galaxies – show recent star formation (in disc) – have rotating discs • stars all orbit in same direction – have complex internal structure – are more common in low-density environments – have a smaller range of masses Lenticular (S0/SB0) galaxies are like spiral galaxies with no gas Irregular galaxies are mostly like spirals too small to become organised Galaxy problems • What makes some galaxies elliptical and others spiral? – their mass? – their age? – their rotation? – their history? • How do spiral galaxies avoid “winding up” their spiral arms? • How does the evolution of galaxies relate to the presence of central supermassive black holes? – the Milky Way’s is, if anything, less massive than most! Galaxies and cosmology • Almost all galaxies are moving away from us – and the greater their distance, the faster they recede (Hubble’s law) • Clusters of galaxies group to form huge superclusters, separated by vast voids – how does this large scale structure develop? • What is the dark matter? From http://archive.ncsa.uiuc.edu/Cyberia/Cosmos/Footprints.html From http://astron.berkeley.edu/~jcohn/lens.html From Brian Schmidt’s web site, http://msowww.anu.edu.au/~brian/PUBLIC/public.html http://www.aip.org/history/einstein Henrietta Leavitt discovers a correlation between Cepheids' period and luminosity (1912). Leavitt discovered a direct correlation between the time it took a star to go from bright to dim and how bright it actually was. During her career, Leavitt discovered more than 2,400 variable stars. http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/aso/databank/entries/baleav.html The age of the universe as determined from the Hubble constant is now consistent with that determined from the oldest stars in globular clusters. Robert W. Wilson Cosmology becomes a science: Robert W. Wilson and Arno Penzias discover the cosmic background radiation in 1964. Nobel Prize, for what has been called “the greatest scientific discovery ever”. Robert Woodrow Wilson – Autobiography [copied and edited from www.nobel.se] During my pre-college years I went on many trips with my father into the oil fields to visit their operations. I puttered around the machine, electronics, and automobile shops while he went about his business. I used to fix radios and later television sets for fun and spending money. I built my own hi-fi set and enjoyed helping friends with their amateur radio transmitters. I did a senior thesis with C.F. Squire building a regulator for a magnet for use in low-temperature physics. Following that I had a summer job with Exxon and obtained my first patent. Following Rice, I went to Caltech for a Ph.D in physics. David Dewhirst, a Cambridge astronomer, suggested that I see John Bolton and Gordon Stanley about radio astronomy. Maarten Schmidt, who had previously done galactic research and was currently working on quasars, saw me through the last months of thesis work. I joined Bell Laboratories at Crawford Hill in 1963 as part of A.B. Crawford's Radio Research department in R. Kompfner's laboratory. I started working with the only other radio astronomer, Arno Penzias, who had been there about two years. In early 1990’s, COBE sees inhomogeneities in cosmic background radiation (about one part in 100 000): the seeds of the structure (galaxies, clusters etc.) seen in our present universe, and evidence for both quantum fluctuations and inflation in the extremely early universe. In addition, the peak associated with acoustic oscillations (more later) indicates that the universe is flat. http://archive.ncsa.uiuc.edu/Cyberia/Cosmos/Footprints.html] A bonus: COBE image of the Milky Way (credit to Ned Wright) http://archive.ncsa.uiuc.edu/Cyberia/Cosmos/Images/Geometry_lg.jpg From Brian Schmidt’s web site, http://msowww.anu.edu.au/~brian/PUBLIC/public.html From Brian Schmidt’s web site, http://msowww.anu.edu.au/~brian/PUBLIC/public.html Credit: Riess et al. 2004 and NASA Evidence from Type Ia supernovae for a decelerating, then accelerating universe, and thus for dark energy. These are images of three of the most distant supernovae known, discovered using the Hubble Space Telescope as a supernova search engine. The stars exploded back when the universe was approximately half its current age. The light is just arriving at Earth now. Supernovae are so bright they can be seen far away and far back in time. This allows astronomers to trace the expansion rate of the universe, and to determine how it is affected by the repulsive push of dark energy, an unknown form of energy that pervades space. Credit to Adam Riess et al. and NASA. Images from http://www-int.stsci.edu/~ariess and http://hubblesite.org/newscenter/newsdesk/archive/releases/2004/12/image/ a Fritz Zwicky (1930’s) and Vera Rubin (see next page) discover dark matter. http://www.dynamical-systems.org/zwicky/Zwicky-e.html In the thirties, Zwicky and Smith both examined closely two relatively nearby clusters, the Coma cluster and the Virgo cluster. They looked at the individual galaxies making up the clusters individually, and the velocities of the clusters. What they found was that the velocities of the galaxies were about a factor of ten to one hundred larger than they expected. The velocities can indicate the total mass inside the cluster. The more mass in the cluster, the greater the forces acting on each galaxy, which accelerates the galaxies to higher velocities.. http://www.swemorph.com/zwicky.html From http://www.astro.queensu.ca/~dursi/dm-tutorial/dm1.html Vera Rubin determined the velocities as a function of distance from the galactic center of clouds of ionized hydrogen (in astrophysical terminology, HII regions). This was done by measurement of the Doppler shift of their H-alpha emission lines. The hydrogen clouds move with the stars and other visible matter in the galaxies. Their velocities are more easily and directly measured than other visible matter. Rubin found that the velocities of the clouds did not decrease with increasing distance from the galactic center, and in some cases even increased a little. This is in striking contrast to the decrease in velocity with radius predicted by Keplerian motion, which would occur if all the mass of the galaxy were concentrated in the center of the galaxy. Detailed observations were first made by Rubin and W.K. Ford of the Andromeda galaxy and published in "Rotation of the Andromeda Nebula from a Spectroscopic Survey of Emission Regions," Astrophysical Journal 159, 379 (1970). They then made observations of over 60 other spiral galaxies which apparently confirmed that the presence of dark matter was a general phenomenon ["Rotation Velocities of 16 Sa Galaxies and a Comparison of Sa, Sb, and Sc Rotation Properties," Astrophys. J. 289, 81 (1985), with D. Burstein, W. K. Ford, Jr., and N. Thonnard]. Photo credit: Mark Godfrey by Benjamin Johnson http://www.physics.ucla.edu/~cwp/articles/rubindm/rubindm.html From http://astron.berkeley.edu/~jcohn/lens.html From http://astron.berkeley.edu/~jcohn/lens.html http://archive.ncsa.uiuc.edu/Cyberia/Cosmos/Images/CosmicTimeline_gr.jpg The early universe must have been extremely hot and dense 3 minutes T about 109 K Wien's displacement law T const ~R 1 1 T~ ~ R Hubble image of spiral galaxy NGC 4414. [http://nssdc.gsfc.nasa.gov/photo_gallery] Resembling a gigantic hubcap in space, a 3,700-light-year-wide dust disk encircles a 300-million- solar-mass black hole in the center of the elliptical galaxy NGC 7052. The disk, possibly a remnant of an ancient galaxy collision, will be swallowed up by the black hole in several billion years. The black-and-white image on the left, taken by a ground-based telescope, shows the complete galaxy. The Hubble picture on the right is a close-up view of the dust disk surrounding the black hole. [http://hubblesite.org/newscenter/archive] Charles Bennett presenting Wilkinson Microwave Anisotropy Probe (WMAP) results at a press conference in Feb. 2003. He is the principal investigator for WMAP, which recently determined the age, content, history, and other key properties of the universe with unprecedented accuracy. The Wilkinson Microwave Anisotropy Probe (WMAP) is named in honor of David Wilkinson of Princeton University, a world-renown cosmologist and WMAP team member who died in September 2002. WMAP has made the first detailed full-sky map of the oldest light in the universe. It is a "baby picture" of the universe. Colors indicate "warmer" (red) and "cooler" (blue) spots. (The oval shape is a projection to display the whole sky.) The microwave light captured in this picture is from 380,000 years after the Big Bang, over 13 billion years ago. The data brings into sharp focus the seeds that generated the cosmic structure we see today. These patterns are tiny temperature differences within an extraordinarily evenly dispersed microwave light bathing the Universe, which now averages a frigid 2.73 degrees above absolute zero temperature. WMAP resolves slight temperature fluctuations, which vary by only millionths of a degree. These data support and strengthen the Big Bang and Inflation Theories. [http://map.gsfc.nasa.gov] Power Spectrum (Fingerprint of the Universe)The "angular spectrum" of the fluctuations in the WMAP full-sky map. The shapes of these two curves contain a wealth of information about the age and content of the universe and about the source of the fluctuations seen in the picture. The rise in the bottom curve at large angles (~90 degrees) is the indication that the first stars in the universe formed very quickly. Looking Back In Time. WMAP, in the present era, looks back to the first light to break free in the Universe, the afterglow of the Big Bang that emerged 380,000 years after the Big Bang. This light, seen today, has taken over 13 billion years to reach us. During that time, giant clouds of gas in the early Universe condensed under the force of gravity to form the first stars (200 million years after the Big Bang). Then, galaxies and galaxy clusters formed into the vast structure we see today. The temperature fluctuations seen today correspond to the seeds that grew to become galaxies. The First Stars. The first stars in the Universe turn on. WMAP data reveals that this era occurred 200 million years after the Big Bang, much earlier than many scientists had suspected. Content of the Universe. The Universe is much more than what meets the eye. The contents of the Universe include 4% atoms. This is ordinary matter, the stuff from which stars and everything we see and touch is made. WMAP data reveals that 23% of the Universe is unseen dark matter, a mysterious form of matter intrinsically different from atoms. This matter does not radiate light like ordinary matter, but is detected only indirectly by its gravity. Most of the Universe, 73%, is a mysterious form of energy, dubbed dark energy, that acts as sort of an anti-gravity force and is responsible for accelerating the expansion of the Universe. The light that is reaching us has been stretched out as the universe has stretched, so light that was once beyond gamma rays is now reaching us in the form of microwaves. Microwaves are the same kind of electromagnetic radiation as the light we see with our eyes, but stretched out to a longer wavelength. Map showing an asymmetry (light and dark gray tones), called the "dipole", due to the motion of the spacecraft. The foreground signal of the Milky Way can be separated from the cosmic background because they are different colors. WMAP Conclusions The new WMAP data has been combined with other diverse cosmic measurements (galaxy clustering, Lyman-alpha cloud clustering, supernovae, etc.) to yield a new unified understanding of the universe: *Universe is 13.7 billion years old with a margin of error of close to 1%. *First stars ignited 200 million years after the Big Bang. *Light in WMAP picture from 379,000 years after the Big Bang. *Content of the Universe: 4% Atoms, 23% Cold Dark Matter, 73% Dark energy. *The data places new constraints on the dark energy. It seems more like a "cosmological constant" than a negative-pressure energy field called "quintessence". But quintessence is not ruled out. *Fast moving neutrinos do not play any major role in the evolution of structure in the universe. They would have prevented the early clumping of gas in the universe, delaying the emergence of the first stars, in conflict with the new WMAP data. *Expansion rate (Hubble constant) value: Ho= 71 km/sec/Mpc (with a margin of error of about 5%) *New evidence for Inflation (in polarized signal) *For the theory that fits our data, the Universe will expand forever. (The nature of the dark energy is still a mystery. If it changes with time, or if other unknown and unexpected things happen in the universe, this conclusion could change.) The Sloan Digital Sky Survey is the most ambitious astronomical survey project ever undertaken. The survey will map in detail one-quarter of the entire sky, determining the positions and absolute brightnesses of more than 100 million celestial objects. It will also measure the distances to more than a million galaxies and quasars. Credit and copyright: Sloan Digital Sky Survey Team, NASA, NSF, DOE Evidence for a mysterious dark energy in the universe: Gazing to the far reaches of space and time, NASA's Hubble Space Telescope identified the farthest stellar explosion ever seen, a supernova that erupted 10 billion years ago. By examining the glow from this dying star, astronomers have amassed more evidence that a mysterious, repulsive force is at work in the cosmos, making galaxies rush ever faster away from each other. [http://hubblesite.org/newscenter/archive] From Brian Schmidt’s web site, http://msowww.anu.edu.au/~brian/PUBLIC/public.html This and several following slides from http://wwwsupernova.lbl.gov The predicted abundance of elements heavier than hydrogen, as a function of the density of baryons in the universe (expressed in terms of the fraction of critical and the Hubble parameter). From http://astron.berkeley.edu/%7emwhite/darkmatter/dm.html The Four Pillars of the Standard Cosmology The four key observational successes of the standard Hot Big Bang model are the following: Expansion of the Universe Origin of the cosmic background radiation Nucleosynthesis of the light elements Formation of galaxies and large-scale structure The Big Bang model makes accurate and scientifically testable hypotheses in each of these areas and there is remarkable agreement with the observational data. from http://www.damtp.cam.ac.uk/user/gr/public/bb_pillars.html