Physics 133: Extragalactic Astronomy ad Cosmology

Similar documents
Physics 133: Extragalactic Astronomy and Cosmology

2.1 Basics of the Relativistic Cosmology: Global Geometry and the Dynamics of the Universe Part I

PHY 475/375. Lecture 5. (April 9, 2012)

Redshift-Distance Relationships

3 The Friedmann-Robertson-Walker metric

Special & General Relativity

Lecture 05. Cosmology. Part I

Lecture 14: Cosmological Principles

Uniformity of the Universe

Astronomy, Astrophysics, and Cosmology

Astr 2320 Tues. May 2, 2017 Today s Topics Chapter 23: Cosmology: The Big Bang and Beyond Introduction Newtonian Cosmology Solutions to Einstein s

Cosmic Confusion. common misconceptions about the big bang, the expansion of the universe and cosmic horizons.

Cosmology with Galaxy Clusters. I. A Cosmological Primer

PHYM432 Relativity and Cosmology 17. Cosmology Robertson Walker Metric

Ay1 Lecture 17. The Expanding Universe Introduction to Cosmology

Relativity, Gravitation, and Cosmology

Tuesday: Special epochs of the universe (recombination, nucleosynthesis, inflation) Wednesday: Structure formation

Introduction to Cosmology

Introduction to Cosmology (in 5 lectures) Licia Verde

MASSACHUSETTS INSTITUTE OF TECHNOLOGY Physics Department Physics 8.286: The Early Universe October 27, 2013 Prof. Alan Guth PROBLEM SET 6

AST1100 Lecture Notes

Modeling the Universe Chapter 11 Hawley/Holcomb. Adapted from Dr. Dennis Papadopoulos UMCP

A5682: Introduction to Cosmology Course Notes. 2. General Relativity

Why is the Universe Expanding?

Third Year: General Relativity and Cosmology. 1 Problem Sheet 1 - Newtonian Gravity and the Equivalence Principle

4.2 METRIC. gij = metric tensor = 4x4 symmetric matrix

AST1100 Lecture Notes

12. Relativistic Cosmology I. Simple Solutions to the Einstein Equations

Curved Spacetime I. Dr. Naylor

Lecture Outlines. Chapter 26. Astronomy Today 8th Edition Chaisson/McMillan Pearson Education, Inc.

Cosmology: An Introduction. Eung Jin Chun

baryons+dm radiation+neutrinos vacuum curvature

3 Spacetime metrics. 3.1 Introduction. 3.2 Flat spacetime

PAPER 73 PHYSICAL COSMOLOGY

Licia Verde. ICREA & ICC-UB-IEEC CERN Theory Division.

In the expanding Universe, a comoving volume element expands along with the cosmological flow, getting physically larger over time.

Physics 133: Extragalactic Astronomy ad Cosmology

Cosmology ASTR 2120 Sarazin. Hubble Ultra-Deep Field

Cosmology PHYS3170 The angular-diameter-redshift relation

Clusters are Very Large Magnets. U NM December 1, 2009

Cosmological Issues. Consider the stress tensor of a fluid in the local orthonormal frame where the metric is η ab

1 Cosmological Principle

3.1 Cosmological Parameters

Is inflation really necessary in a closed Universe? Branislav Vlahovic, Maxim Eingorn. Please see also arxiv:

The Expanding Universe

The Early Universe: A Journey into the Past

3 Friedmann Robertson Walker Universe

Cosmology (Cont.) Lecture 19

The Early Universe: A Journey into the Past

Cosmology. Assumptions in cosmology Olber s paradox Cosmology à la Newton Cosmology à la Einstein Cosmological constant Evolution of the Universe

A brain teaser: The anthropic principle! Last lecture I said Is cosmology a science given that we only have one Universe? Weak anthropic principle: "T

Week 2 Part 2. The Friedmann Models: What are the constituents of the Universe?

Metrics and Curvature

Licia Verde. Introduction to cosmology. Lecture 4. Inflation

Clusters: Context and Background

General Relativity Lecture 20

The Theory of Relativity

Cosmology. Introduction Geometry and expansion history (Cosmic Background Radiation) Growth Secondary anisotropies Large Scale Structure

Outline. Covers chapter 2 + half of chapter 3 in Ryden

Cosmology - How the Universe Came to Be. PLATO: Cosmology

The Metric and The Dynamics

Oddities of the Universe

Homework 6 Name: Due Date: June 9, 2008

Astronomy 102: Stars and Galaxies Review Exam 3

IoP. An Introduction to the Science of Cosmology. Derek Raine. Ted Thomas. Series in Astronomy and Astrophysics

Gravitation: Cosmology

Lecture 34: The Big Bang Readings: Sections 28-3 and 28-6

Origins Lecture 15; May

3 Friedmann Robertson Walker Universe

Kinetic Theory of Dark Energy within General Relativity

A A + B. ra + A + 1. We now want to solve the Einstein equations in the following cases:

Set 2: Cosmic Geometry

Outline. The Cosmological Principle II. The Perfect Cosmological Principle. The cosmological principle. Covers chapter 2 + half of chapter 3 in Ryden

Introduction to General Relativity

Astro-2: History of the Universe

General Relativity and Cosmology. The End of Absolute Space Cosmological Principle Black Holes CBMR and Big Bang

Particle and photon orbits in McVittie spacetimes. Brien Nolan Dublin City University Britgrav 2015, Birmingham

The early and late time acceleration of the Universe

Physics 133: Extragalactic Astronomy ad Cosmology

Superluminal Recession Velocities

1. De Sitter Space. (b) Show that the line element for a positively curved FRW model (k = +1) with only vacuum energy (P = ) is

Today in Astronomy 102: relativity and the Universe

You may not start to read the questions printed on the subsequent pages until instructed to do so by the Invigilator.

Cosmological Issues. Consider the stress tensor of a fluid in the local orthonormal frame where the metric is η ab

Cosmology ESP. Kevin Janeiro. May 26, 2015

HOMEWORK 10. Applications: special relativity, Newtonian limit, gravitational waves, gravitational lensing, cosmology, 1 black holes

PROBLEM SET 10 (The Last!)

Astronomy 1 Winter Lecture 24; March

Astronomy 182: Origin and Evolution of the Universe

carroll/notes/ has a lot of good notes on GR and links to other pages. General Relativity Philosophy of general

going vertically down, L 2 going horizontal. Observer O' outside the lift. Cut the lift wire lift accelerates wrt

PROBLEM SET 6 EXTRA CREDIT PROBLEM SET

About the Tutorial. Audience. Prerequisites. Copyright & Disclaimer. Cosmology

The State of the Universe [2010] There is only data and the interpretation of data (green text = assumptions)

Lecture 37 Cosmology [not on exam] January 16b, 2014

AU/Mpc km/au s 1 (2) = s 1 (3) n(t 0 ) = ɛ(t 0) mc 2 (7) m(h) = m p = kg (8)

8. The Expanding Universe, Revisited

The Expanding Universe

Modern Physics notes Spring 2005 Paul Fendley Lecture 37

Superluminal motion in the quasar 3C273

Transcription:

Physics 133: Extragalactic Astronomy ad Cosmology Lecture 4; January 15 2014

Previously The dominant force on the scale of the Universe is gravity Gravity is accurately described by the theory of general relativity Mass-energy tells spacetime how to curve and spacetime tells mass-energy how to move In three dimensions there are only 3 possible isotropic and homogeneous manifolds Positive curvature (hyper-sphere) Negative curvature (hyper-hyperboloid) Zero curvature (flat Euclidean space)

Homework #3: Find on the webpage at http://www.physics.ucsb.edu/~tt/phys133/ homework.html Due wednesday January 22

Outline: Geometry of the Universe: The Robertson-Walker metric Direct observational limits on the curvature of the Universe Proper distance and redshift Dynamics of the Universe: Friedmann Equation

Space-time in special relativity. I In special relativity, space and time are united in a (flat) 4D space-time. Do you remember? How do you transform between reference frames? The metric of this space is? Minkowski s: ds 2 =-c 2 dt 2 +dr 2 +r 2 dω 2

Space-time in special relativity. II A photon travels along null geodesics, ds 2 =0. This means photons travel along straight lines, at the speed of light.

Space-time in general relativity. Homogeneous and isotropic universe If the universe is homogenous and isotropic we can separate the time part of the metric from the space part of the metric and define a cosmic time t. The metric can be written in one concise form, the Robertson-Walker metric. [Blackboard]

Space-time in general relativity. Properties of RW metric Space component is a hyper-sphere, hyper-hyperboloid or a flat Euclidean space up to a constant scalar factor a(t) that depends on time. (k and R) The variable t (cosmic time) is the time measured by an observer who sees the universe expanding uniformly, i.e. at rest with the Hubble Flow The space variables are called comoving coordinates. In absence of perturbations or forces, an observer at rest would remain at a constant comoving position (this is called the Hubble Flow). Note that although observers are at rest, the distance between them increases due to a(t). Hubble s law is not the result of motion (because with respect to the comoving coordinates objects are not moving) but of the expansion of space time.

Space-time in general relativity. The RW metric and the Universe The RW metric is an approximation valid only over large enough volume (100 Mpc or more). On large scales it describes the universe very well. The kinematics of the universe is described by a(t). As we will see, one can write dynamical equations for a(t) and solve them, thus reconstructing the past and future of the universe. We know the local derivative of a(t). What is it? The Hubble constant!

Direct limits on the geometry of the Universe. We could in principle measure the curvature by drawing a big triangle and measuring the angles. This is impractical, although in some sense this is what we will be doing later on One thing we know is that if the universe is positively curved, the radius cannot be much smaller than the Hubble Length, otherwise photons would have had time to go around the surface in circles and we would see periodical images.

Distances in the Universe. Not your grandmother s distance! What is the distance between two objects in a RW metric? There are several kinds of distance. E.g.: Proper distance Luminosity distance Angular size distance All of them are a function of time, of course.

Distances in the Universe. The proper distance is the distance between two sets of comoving coordinates at a given cosmic time. This is given by the spatial part of the metric at fixed a(t) [Blackboard] Proper distance

Expansion factor and redshift. What is the distance to the objects in the UDF? Given the redshift, which is easy to measure, we can infer a(t) at the time the light was emitted. This will give us the distances(s)

Expansion factor and redshift. Propagation of light. Light travels along null geodesics: c 2 dt 2 =a(t) 2 dr 2 Imagine a wave of light. As time goes by, between one crest and another, the universe expands. So that the distance between wave crests appears longer to the observer. Light is redshifted! [Blackboard] Redshift 1+z=1/a(t e )

Dynamics of the Universe. Friedmann Equation Now that we have the metric we need the equation of motion, i.e. the dynamics This is given by Friedmann Equation (1922) Newtonian analog [Blackboard] 1888-1925

The universe is expanding. More frequently asked questions Are galaxies at z=2 moving faster than the speed of light? No, the observed redshift is not really a Doppler effect! It s only a geometrical effect due to the expansion of the universe. As the universe gets larger wavelengths get stretched, resulting in the observed redshift.

Theoretical foundations of the Big Bang. Summary The universe is a 4 dimensional manifold as in General Relativity The universe is homogeneous and isotropic This implies that space and time can be separated so that we can define a cosmic time t There are only three possible geometries for the universe. Their metric is the Robertson-Walker metric In a non static universe redshift is a measure of distance. The dynamics of the Universe is described by Friedmann Equation [TO BE CONTINUED].

The End See you on Wednesday! [Monday is MLK s b-day]