The CMBR Horizon Problem The CMBR has the same properties in all directions. Consider two portions of the Universe from opposite ends of the sky. These.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Objectives: 1. relate the cosmological principle to isotropy and homgeneity of the universe. 2. understand how Hubble’s law is used to map the universe,
Advertisements

Major Epochs in the Early Universe t3x10 5 years: Universe matter dominated Why? Let R be the scale length.
Galaxies Sombrero Galaxy (spiral) Andromeda Galaxy (spiral)
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.
Galaxies and the Universe
Galaxies Collection of stars…millions and billions of stars Distances measured in light years – Distance light travels in 1 year –9.5 x m (6 trillion.
Cosmology The Origin and Future of the Universe Part 2 From the Big Bang to Today.
The Milky Way Galaxy 19 April 2005 AST 2010: Chapter 24.
© 2010 Pearson Education, Inc. Chapter 23 The Beginning of Time.
OPTION E - ASTROPHYSICS E6 Galaxies and the expanding universe Galactic motion.
Universe Eighth Edition Universe Roger A. Freedman William J. Kaufmann III CHAPTER 26 Cosmology Cosmology.
No Structure on Largest Scales (Galaxies distributed fairly uniformly)‏ Surprising given structure on smaller scales Cosmological Principle: Universe is.
Chapter 31 Galaxies & the Universe Review & Recap It does this by precisely measuring the speed of gas and stars around a black hole. This provides clues.
Introductory Video: The Big Bang Theory Objectives  Understand the Hubble classification scheme of galaxies and describe the structure of the Milky.
Chapter 12. Final Exam Update Dec. 11 th,2013 Three parts: Part I : test SLO 5 questions. Part II: test SLO 5 questions Part III: Ch. 10,11,12,13,14.
Review for Exam 3.
Lecture 4. Big bang, nucleosynthesis, the lives and deaths of stars. reading: Chapter 1.
The Big Bang. CMBR Discussion Why can’t the CMBR be from a population of unresolved stars at high redshift?
17.3 The Big Bang and Inflation 17.4 Observing the Big Bang for yourself Our Goals for Learning What aspects of the universe were originally unexplained.
Stars & Gas: Building Blocks of the Galaxy Stars as Black Body Radiators Hertzsprung-Russell diagram: Luminosity vs. Temperature Radiation over a `continuous'
The Evolution of the Universe Nicola Loaring. The Big Bang According to scientists the Universe began ~15 billion years ago in a hot Big Bang. At creation.
Pop-quiz #21 Which of the following statements is TRUE? A.Black holes can emit particles and thereby lose mass — this is called Hawking radiation B.John.
Stars.
Hubble’s Law Our goals for learning What is Hubble’s Law?
Unit 1: The Big Picture. What is Astronomy? The study of stars & anything outside Earth –Not astrology…no horoscope reading here! Today we will go over.
Cosmology and Dark Matter II: The inflationary Universe Jerry Sellwood.
Cosmic Microwave Background Radiation (CMBR) Relic of the Big Bang (“afterglow” of initial fireball) predicted in late 1940s Discovered by Penzias & Wilson.
I>clicker quiz #20 Which of the following statements is FALSE? A.Black holes emit Hawking radiation which can be characterized as black-body radiation.
Unit Stars and the Universe. Stars A star is a giant, hot ball of gas. Stars generate light and heat through nuclear reactions. They are powered by the.
Solar system: 9 light hours diameter. Spiral galaxy: 80,000 light years diameter.
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.
Expansion of the Universe Natural consequence of the basic field equations of the General Theory of Relativity (GTR) When GTR was first developed in the.
I>clicker Quiz #14 Which of the following statements is TRUE? A.Hubble’s discovery that most distant galaxies are receding from us tells us that we are.
Hubble’s galaxy classes Spheroid Dominates Disk Dominates.
The Life of the Universe From Beginning to End.
Week 9 (11/13) – Quiz #22 Which of the following statements is TRUE? A.Inflation is the astronomical term used to describe the transformation our bellies.
The Beginning of Time: Evidence for the Big Bang & the Theory of Inflation.
The Universe and Galaxies The universe is vast in size and very very old.
Astronomy 404/CSI 769 Extragalactic Astronomy
Chapter 18: Chapter 18: Cosmology. WHAT DO YOU THINK? What does the universe encompass? Is the universe expanding, fixed in size, or contracting? Will.
“OUR GALAXY” Definition of a Galaxy: a huge group of individual stars, star clusters, dust, and gas bound together by gravity.
Galaxies and the Universe Ch 25 Section 3. What are the objects in the sky? GALAXIES! Groups of stars, dust, and gases held together by gravity.
Our Milky Way Galaxy. The Milky Way Almost everything we see in the night sky belongs to the Milky Way. We see most of the Milky Way as a faint band of.
Cosmology -- the Origin and Structure of the Universe Cosmological Principle – the Universe appears the same from all directions. There is no preferred.
1 Cosmology HNRT 227 Chapter October 2015 Great Idea: The universe began billions of years ago in the big bang and it has been expanding ever since.
Pop-quiz #16 Which of the following statements is TRUE? A.Kepler’s 2 nd law states that the orbits of planets are ellipses with the Sun at one of two foci.
1 Cosmic Microwave Background Radiation (CMBR) Relic of the Big Bang ( “ afterglow ” of initial fireball) predicted in late 1940s Discovered by Penzias.
Universe Tenth Edition Chapter 25 Cosmology: The Origin and Evolution of the Universe Roger Freedman Robert Geller William Kaufmann III.
Galaxy Formation Collapse of an over-dense region of space (containing more gas and dark matter than average) under gravity Disks are produced as the cloud.
The Beginning of Time Review: evidence for dark matter evidence for dark matter comes from  motions of stars and gas in galaxies  motions of galaxies.
The Fate of the Universe. The fate depends on the rate of expansion and the density Density greater than critical value – gravity will halt expansion.
 Pinning down the date of creation with such precision is impressive, but we have gone much further. We have begun to piece together the whole history.
The Big Bang.  Cosmology – The study of the structure and evolution of the universe.  Big Bang Theory – The universe was very hot and small. Billions.
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.
Discovering the Universe Eighth Edition Discovering the Universe Eighth Edition Neil F. Comins William J. Kaufmann III CHAPTER 18 Cosmology Cosmology.
COSMOLOGY The study of the origin, structure, and future of the universe.
Pop-quiz #13 Which of the following statements is TRUE? A.Inflation started right after Planck time when the Universe was seconds old B.Gravity.
Galaxies Collection of stars…millions and billions of stars
© 2017 Pearson Education, Inc.
Chapter 23 The Beginning of Time
Alternative to Big Bang theory: Steady State Cosmology
The Milky Way, Deep Space, and Beyond!
Our Milky Way Galaxy.
Expansion of the Universe
Galaxies Astrobiology and Cosmology
The Components and Origin of the Universe
Integrated Science.
Homework #10 is due tonight, 9:00 pm.
Cosmology: The Origin and Evolution of the Universe
Presentation transcript:

The CMBR Horizon Problem The CMBR has the same properties in all directions. Consider two portions of the Universe from opposite ends of the sky. These two portions are within our observable Universe (horizon), but they are outside each other's horizons. Light has not yet had time to travel from one of these portions to the other. If they have never been in communication, how do they know to be at the same temperature?

Inflation Very early phase of extremely rapid expansion (Guth, Linde, 1980s). During this inflationary phase, the Universe expands by a factor of in the time span t= sec to t= sec. Inflationary phase is immediately after the epoch at which the strong nuclear force froze out, and before the weak nuclear force and electromagnetic force froze apart from each other. All of our observable Universe was an infinitesimally small volume x10 50 x10 50 = times smaller than we would have guessed from a simple extrapolation of the expansion we observe today.

Solving the Horizon Problem Two parts of the Universe on opposite sides of the sky now outside each other's horizons. Prior to inflationary epoch, these two patches would have been within each other's horizons and therefore `known' to acquire the same temperature. Inflation caused them to expand out of each other's horizon. Inflation requires the universe to expand faster than the speed of light. Does not violate relativity — STR only applies in flat spacetime (i.e., in weak gravitational fields) Special relativity is a special case of General relativity; inflation does obey the equations of General relativity.

Inflation, continued Why is the density of the present Universe so close to critical (or why is the geometry of the observable Universe so close to flat)? The scale of the observable Universe is much smaller than its `radius of curvature'. What causes the rapid expansion during the inflationary era? Inflation may be thought of as a phase transition in the Universe (as in a transition from a liquid to solid phase). The `latent heat' in this phase transition builds up into an extremely high vacuum energy density, and this drives the expansion (analogous to the repulsive effect of Einstein's cosmological constant Λ).

i>clicker Quiz #19 Which of the following statements about the EPOCH OF CONFINEMENT is TRUE? A.At this instant, quarks became bound in sets of three to produce protons and neutrons, while matter and radiation continued to interact strongly B.The Universe was matter dominated at this epoch C.Protons and electrons formed stable hydrogen atoms for the first time at this epoch, and the matter in the Universe became mostly transparent to radiation D.This epoch was immediately followed by Inflation

i>clicker Quiz #20 Which of the following statements is TRUE? A.Inflation ended right at Planck time when the Universe was seconds old B.Gravity was the last of the four fundamental forces of Nature to “freeze” out (i.e. develop a unique identity) C.Radiation dominated over matter at very early times in the Universe’s history, but matter has dominated over radiation ever since the Universe’s 300,000 th birthday D.Most of the elements in the periodic table that we learn about in school/college today were synthesized in the early Universe and this is known as Big Bang Nucleosynthesis

Solar system: 9 light hours diameter

Spiral galaxy: 80,000 light years diameter

Coma cluster of galaxies: 2.5 million light years across

Survey of distant galaxies: 5 to 9 billion light-years away

Cosmic Microwave Background Radiation (after-glow from the Big Bang) - edge of the observable Universe: 14 billion light years away

The Detailed Structure of a Spiral Galaxy

i>clicker Quiz #21 Which of the following statements about INFLATION is FALSE? A.The Universe expands faster than the speed of light during Inflation B.The rapid expansion during Inflation naturally explains why spacetime appears to be “flat” in terms of its geometric properties C.Inflation solves the CMBR horizon problem D.Inflation violates the principles of Einstein’s General Theory of Relativity E.The theory of Inflation predicted that there should be fluctuations at the level of 1 part in 10 5 in the CMBR

i>clicker Quiz #22 Which of the following statements is FALSE? A.The Michelson-Morley experiment established that light is bent in a strong gravitational field B.Einstein received the Nobel Prize in Physics for explaining the photo-electric effect and the “ particle ” (photon) nature of light given by the law: E = hν C.Kepler ’ s laws can be used to describe the motion of planets around the Sun D.Hubble is credited with the discovery of the expansion of the Universe E.Guth and Linde formulated the theory of Inflation

Introduction to Galaxies Basic Structure How densely packed are stars in a galaxy?  Size (diameter) of a typical star: 10 6 km  Distance between stars: 1 pc = 3 x km  Analogy: 1 cm sized marbles separated by 300 km! What fills in the space between stars?  Interstellar medium: gas, dust

Disk Galaxies: Structural Components Flattened differentially-rotating disk Dense centrally-concentrated bulge with mostly disordered orbits Extended, not centrally concentrated, mostly dark halo Bulge + Halo = “Spheroid”

Spiral Galaxy Properties Bulge stars are older on average than disk stars Youngest disk stars lie in very thin plane Older disk stars lie in a thicker disk Disk stars, particularly young ones, are organized into spiral arms Spiral density waves in the disk: the most successful explanation of spiral structure

Globular Clusters

Most galaxies, including our own, contain dense clusters of 10 3 – 10 6 stars known as globular clusters The observed distribution of globular clusters tells us that the Sun is NOT at the center of the Milky Way galaxy

Galaxy Types Spirals & irregulars (disk galaxies); ellipticals Morphological (structural) features: Disk, bulge, bulge+disk, presence/absence of central bar Nature of kinematics (internal motion of stars and gas): Coherent rotation of stars and gas in a disk; differential rotation Random motion of stars in the bulge of a spiral galaxy or elliptical

Hubble Sequence of Galaxies Tuning fork diagram: E0-E7, S0 Sa-Sd / SBa-SBd, Irr Morphological trends along the sequence: Shape (flattening) Bulge-to-disk ratio Spiral arms Kinematical trends along the sequence: Ellipticals: mostly random motion, hardly any rotation Spirals: mostly rotation, hardly any random motion Trends in the stellar mix: Ellipticals: mostly cool (old) stars Spirals: dominated by hot (young) stars