The Birth of the Universe. Hubble Expansion and the Big Bang The fact that more distant galaxies are moving away from us more rapidly indicates that the.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Chapter 18: Cosmology For a humorous approach to quarks, check out the Jefferson Lab’s game.  In Looking for the Top Quark, each player receives six quarks.
Advertisements

Olber’s paradox Why isn't the night sky as uniformly bright as the surface of the Sun? If the Universe has infinitely many stars, then it should be uniformly.
Origin & Evolution of the Universe
Thursday, April 8 th Agenda  Finish Section 18.1: The Universe  Origin of the universe, red shift, big bang theory  In-Class Assignments Section 18.1.
What is the Big Bang Theory? Not the TV show.. It is a theory of what happened 14 (13.7) BILLION years ago. It tells us how the universe began! Singularity:
A Scientific History of the Universe. How do we predict the conditions of the early universe? What are the different eras in the early universe? What.
Newton’s Hypothesis The universe is infinite, static and uniform. Proven to be incorrect by Olber’s Paradox. Olber theorised that if this was correct then.
Galaxies and the Universe
Chapter 17 The Beginning of Time
Chapter 17: The Birth of the Universe
ORIGIN OF THE UNIVERSE P In the beginning, God created the heaven and the earth; and the earth was without form and void; and darkness was upon the face.
Cosmology The Origin and Future of the Universe Part 2 From the Big Bang to Today.
Objectives Distinguish the different models of the universe.
Cosmology Past, present and future of the universe Is space flat or curved? Where is the center? What lies beyond our limit of vision? What is the universe.
The Birth Of Our Universe The Big Bang And Inflation
Cosmology Astronomy 315 Professor Lee Carkner Lecture 22 "In the beginning the Universe was created. This has made a lot of people very angry and been.
Cosmology Astronomy 315 Professor Lee Carkner Lecture 24.
© 2010 Pearson Education, Inc. Chapter 23 The Beginning of Time.
Universe Eighth Edition Universe Roger A. Freedman William J. Kaufmann III CHAPTER 26 Cosmology Cosmology.
Review for Exam 3.
Evolution of the Universe (continued)
The Big Bang Astrophysics Lesson 18. Learning Objectives To know:-  What is the big bang theory  What is the evidence supporting it including:-  Cosmological.
Chapter 26: Cosmology How big is the universe? How long has it been around and how long will it last?
Contemporary science issues Lesson 16: Has the universe always been there? © 2006 Gatsby Technical Education Projects.
Units to cover: 79, 80, 81, 82, 83, 84. As a star converts most of its hydrogen in its core into helium, the star gets a. less luminous and smaller b.
Expanding Universe 1)Hubble’s Law 2)Expanding Universe 3)Fate of the Universe November 20, 2002 Final Exam will be held in Ruby Diamond Auditorium NOTE.
Theory on the Formation of the Universe
Hubble’s Law Our goals for learning What is Hubble’s Law?
Cosmology: The Study of the Universe as a Whole Physics 360 Geol 360 Astronomy John Swez.
Big Bang Theory An effort to explain what happened at the very beginning of our universe. An effort to explain what happened at the very beginning of our.
Cosmology The Origin and Future of the Universe Part I Olbers’ Paradox.
Hubble’s Observations - Edwin Hubble, in the late 1920's, discovered that all galaxies are moving away from each other as he observed the red shift in.
Hubble’s galaxy classes Spheroid Dominates Disk Dominates.
The Big Bang: what happened, and when did it happen?
The Early Universe II AST 112. Review: Observable Universe There is a distance from us at which there is so much expanding space that an object at this.
The Expanding Universe. The Hubble Law The Hubble constant H o is one of the most important numbers in cosmology because it may be used to estimate the.
The Universe. Galaxies are believed to have formed from mergers of smaller galaxies and star clusters. Galaxy Formation and Evolution.
Origins of the Universe. How did it all get here? How did it all get here? MANY THEORIES!!!! MANY THEORIES!!!! Big Bang Theory Big Bang Theory Steady.
The Big Bang Theory Earth and Space Ms. Lizette Gutierrez Austin High School.
The Big Bang Theory By Stefanie Pacheco Astronomy.
Galaxy Formation and the Hubble Law Assigned reading: Chapter 16 REMINDER: HW7 due Monday, plus Quiz.
Cosmology (Chapter 14) NASA. Student Learning Objectives Describe the Big Bang theory Analyze possible fates of our universe.
Chapter 16-17: Cosmology  Hubble’s law Expansion of Universe 1  Galaxy spectra Optical spectra of remote galaxies show redshift (galaxies appear to move.
The Expanding Universe
Homework for today was WORKBOOK EXERCISE: “Expansion of the Universe” (pg in workbook)
Universe Tenth Edition Chapter 25 Cosmology: The Origin and Evolution of the Universe Roger Freedman Robert Geller William Kaufmann III.
ASTR 113 – 003 Spring 2006 Lecture 12 April 19, 2006 Review (Ch4-5): the Foundation Galaxy (Ch 25-27) Cosmology (Ch28-29) Introduction To Modern Astronomy.
Key Areas covered The temperature of stellar objects is related to the distribution of emitted radiation over a wide range of wavelengths. The wavelength.
The Expanding Universe  When light or sound moves toward or away from an observer, its frequency/wavelength changes (Known as Doppler effect)  Can be.
The Birth of the Universe. Hubble Expansion and the Big Bang The fact that more distant galaxies have higher redshifts indicates that the universe is.
The Origin of the Universe Chapter 20.3 Notes. What is the Universe? The universe consists of all space, matter, and energy that exists—now, in the past,
Milky Way Galaxy. Galaxy A group of stars, dust and gases held together by gravity. 170 billion galaxies in the universe 200 billion stars in a galaxy.
#23 Big Bang Theory The expanding universe and a quick galaxy review.
Cosmology. Olbers’s Paradox The Universe may be infinite – if it is, why is the night sky dark?
Discovering the Universe Eighth Edition Discovering the Universe Eighth Edition Neil F. Comins William J. Kaufmann III CHAPTER 18 Cosmology Cosmology.
The Big Bang Theory.
The Size and Shape of the Universe. The Uniform Temperature of the Early Universe The brighter and darker spots in the microwave background correspond.
© 2017 Pearson Education, Inc.
The expanding universe and a quick galaxy review
Astronomy-Part 2 Notes Origins of the Universe
Astronomy-Part 2 Notes Origins of the Universe
The Big Bang Theory.
Cosmology The study of the structure and evolution of the Universe as a whole. Seeks to answer questions such as: How big is the Universe? What shape is.
The Universe.
Origin of Universe - Big Bang
Cosmology.
The Universe.
Science Notes: Stnd 14 Date Standard 14: 8.ESS1.1 The Big Bang
How was it formed? How old is it? What does the future hold?
What observed feature of the universe motivated scientists to propose the “Big Bang” theory? There is lots of debris in space, as would be expected from.
Presentation transcript:

The Birth of the Universe

Hubble Expansion and the Big Bang The fact that more distant galaxies are moving away from us more rapidly indicates that the universe is expanding. This implies that the universe was born in a huge explosion, or Big Bang.

To detect very distant galaxies, Hubble stared at small patch of sky for an entire week. This image, known as the Hubble Deep Field, shows that galaxies were smaller and more irregular in the past than they are today. Testing the Big Bang: Has the universe changed? If the Big Bang theory is correct, then the universe was very different in the past. We can test this prediction with images of the faintest and most distant galaxies, and hence looking back in time to when the universe was much younger.

Testing the Big Bang: Do we see an afterglow? Another prediction of the Big Bang theory is that the universe was very hot immediately after it was born. As a result, the universe would have glowed at short wavelengths (gamma rays). Because of the expansion of the universe, the light produced after the Big Bang should be redshifted over time, and should now appear at radio wavelengths (or more specifically, microwave wavelengths).

Prediction vs. Observation The Big Bang afterglow was predicted in 1948, and it was detected with a radio telescope in 1965 (resulting in a Nobel Prize). This confirmed the Big Bang theory. This afterglow is called the Cosmic Microwave Background (CMB). It appears across the entire sky in every direction, and its spectrum is equivalent to a blackbody with a temperature of 3 degrees above absolute zero.

The Expansion of Space The galaxies are not flying apart into the universe. The universe itself is expanding. The galaxies are simply riding along as the fabric of space expands.

The Expansion of Space The expansion of the universe also causes light to get stretched to longer wavelengths, or redshifted. So the redshifts that we measure for galaxies are not really due to their velocities away from us, but instead result from the expansion of the space itself.

The Expansion of Space Given that space is distorted by the presence of matter (and energy), it is natural that space experiences expansion along with the matter and energy.

No Center or Edge in the Universe Because space is expanding along with the mass and energy, the universe does not have a center or an edge. As an analogy, imagine a 2-D universe on the surface of a sphere. Now let the sphere expand. The surface area of the sphere increases (like the volume of space in our 3-D universe), and yet there isn’t a location on that surface that is the center of the expansion, and that surface does not have an edge.

The Age of the Universe According to the Big Bang theory, the universe has not existed forever, and instead has a finite age. D/V We can estimate the age of the universe from its rate of expansion, which is measured in the Hubble Law. If the universe expanded at a constant rate since the Big Bang, then the age of the universe would D/V for any point along the Hubble Law, which produces an age of about 13 billion years. D V

The Age of the Universe D/V The gravity from the matter in the universe should slow the expansion of the universe over time. So the universe must have expanded faster in the past than it does now. As a result, the true age of the universe should be less than D/V, or <13 billion years. In other words, because it expanded faster in the past, the universe reached its current size more quickly than if it had been expanding at a constant rate. gravity Big Bang expansion

But stars in some globular clusters are at least 13 billion years old. How can some stars be older than the universe? The solution to this puzzle wasn’t found until the 1990’s, and is explained in the next lecture. The Age of the Universe

The Size of the Universe The observable universe consists of the portion of the universe that is close enough so that light from it has had enough time to reach us since the Universe was born. This region is a sphere centered on the Earth, and its boundary is called the light horizon.

The Size of the Universe The microwave background radiation that we see today was produced shortly after the Big Bang by material that was only 36 million light years from our position in the universe, and yet it took 13 billion years to arrive at our location because of the expansion of the universe. after Big Bang: The matter that produced the microwave photons that we see today is now 46 billion lyrs away, probably in the form of a galaxy. So the current diameter of the observable universe is 92 billion lyrs. Now: our location 46 billion light years 36 million light years CMB seen today

Inflation But how can 2 points in the universe be separated by 92 billion light years when the universe is only about 13 billion years old? The universe has expanded faster than the speed of light! Nothing in the universe can move faster than light, but the universe itself is not restricted to this speed limit as it expands. The most rapid expansion occurred right after the Big Bang in a period called inflation. In a tiny fraction of a second, the universe grew from the size of an atom to 1 billion light years across!

Beyond the Observable Universe Because the universe has expanded faster than the speed of light, some areas of the universe have been pulled beyond our light horizon, and are outside of our observable universe.

Beyond the Observable Universe If we wait long enough, light will eventually reach us from some of the areas currently outside of our observable universe. But other areas are too far away for their light to ever catch up and reach us as the universe expands. Those areas will always remain outside of our observable universe. Theories of inflation suggest that the true size of the universe may be times larger than our observable universe, or light years! And it’s still expanding, so it will grow even larger!

For the first split second after the Big Bang, the universe contained only energy in the form of radiation.  seconds after Big Bang: inflation  seconds: some of the radiation converts to elementary particles (quarks)  seconds: protons and neutrons form  3 minutes: fusion of hydrogen to helium ends  400,000 years: the microwave background that we see today is produced History of the Universe Timeline of Universe

By the time the universe reached an age of 400,000 years, it had expanded enough so that photons of light could travel large distances without scattering. In other words, the universe was now transparent to light. So the microwave background shows us the appearance of the universe 400,000 years after the Big Bang. The Microwave Background

Over time, very small ripples appeared in the dark matter. Gravity caused these ripples to collapse and grow to become dense clumps. The gravity of the dark matter clumps then attracted normal matter. The resulting clumps of normal matter eventually became clusters of galaxies. Formation of Structures

We see the clumps of normal matter that eventually became galaxy clusters in the map of the microwave background. Formation of Galaxies

The Fate of the Universe Will the Universe expand forever? Or will it stop expanding and collapse (a Big Crunch)?