Lecture 11
Lecture 11
Lecture 11
• Assumptions:
• The Universe is in nite in space
• The Universe is static and in nitely old
• Stars are uniformly distributed in the Universe and they have the
same luminosity
• Conclusion:
• The night sky should be extremely bright rather than being dark
• Successes:
• Hubble's Law
• Primordial abundance of light elements
• Cosmic Microwave Background
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Standard Model of Cosmology
• Evidence of New Physics:
• In ation
• Baryogenesis (~5%)
• Dark matter (~25%)
• Dark energy (~70%)
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Cosmological Principle
• In general, it is highly non-trivial to solve the Einstein equations.
Analytic solutions can be found only if we impose speci c
symmetries
• Cosmological Principle:
• The Universe is homogeneous and isotropic
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Friedmann-Robertson-Walker Metric
• Parameter k:
• k = -1 (open universe)
• k = 0 ( at universe)
• k = 1 (closed universe)
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Size of the Universe
• Topologically trivial universe:
• k = 1 => Finite size
• k = 0 or -1 => In nite size
• Bianchi Identity:
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Friedmann Equations
• 2 independent equations
• 3 unknown functions: a(t), ρ(t), P(t)
• Equation of state: P = w ρ
• w = 0 (dust)
• w = 1/3 (radiation)
• w = -1 (vacuum energy)
• Einstein universe
• Matter-dominated universe
• Radiation-dominated universe
• Vacuum-dominated universe
Einstein Universe
• First and Second Friedmann Equations with a Cosmological
Constant:
• P = 0 (dust)
• Static universe
• k = 1 (closed universe), a = a(Λ), ρ = ρ(Λ)
• Unstable
Matter-Dominated Universe
Radiation-Dominated Universe
Vacuum-Dominated Universe
• First and Second Friedmann Equations:
• If Λ < 0 => k = -1
Vacuum-Dominated Universe
• If Λ > 0
Closed Universe
Flat Universe
Open Universe
Eternal expansion
Expansion followed by collapse
Age of the Universe
Age of the Universe
Primordial Plasma
Primordial Plasma
• Number density and energy density:
Non-Degenerate Relativistic Gas
μ, m << T
Non-Relativistic Gas
m >> T
First Friedmann Equation