Download presentation
Presentation is loading. Please wait.
Published byDwight Rice Modified over 9 years ago
1
ASTR 1102-002 2008 Fall Semester Joel E. Tohline, Alumni Professor Office: 247 Nicholson Hall [Slides from Lecture23]
2
Chapter 26: Cosmology and Chapter 27: Exploring the Universe
3
Implications of Big Bang Era of “recombination” and “Cosmic Microwave Background (CMB)” Origin of the Elements Non-uniformities in the Early Universe and the Origin of Galaxies
8
At the time of recombination, the temperature was a few thousand degrees everywhere! But from our point of view “now,” this radiation has been significantly redshifted (due to expansion of the universe) so the spectrum should look like a “black-body” of a much cooler temperature.
9
Remember “Black body spectrum” from Chapter 5
10
At the time of recombination, the temperature was a few thousand degrees everywhere! But from our point of view “now,” this radiation has been significantly redshifted (due to expansion of the universe) so the spectrum should look like a “black-body” of a much cooler temperature. From Einstein’s theory, Dicke & Peebles (Princeton University) predict T = 3 K.
11
At the time of recombination, the temperature was a few thousand degrees everywhere! But from our point of view “now,” this radiation has been significantly redshifted (due to expansion of the universe) so the spectrum should look like a “black-body” of a much cooler temperature. From Einstein’s theory, Dicke & Peebles (Princeton University) predict T = 3 K.
12
Remember “Black body spectrum” from Chapter 5 What would a 3 K spectrum look like?
13
Penzias & Wilson discover CMB radiation; awarded 1978 Nobel Prize
16
Uniformity of CMB COBE satellite measurements (which improved on discovery of Penzias & Wilson) show … –CMB temperature is 2.725 K –Exactly the same temperature no matter which direction you look in the sky! at the time of recombination, the universe was extremely uniform –Slight Doppler shift due to Earth’s motion through space –Otherwise, only very tiny fluctuations; smaller than 200 micro-Kelvin ( K)
17
Uniformity of CMB COBE satellite measurements (which improved on discovery of Penzias & Wilson) show … –CMB temperature is 2.725 K –Exactly the same temperature no matter which direction you look in the sky! at the time of recombination, the universe was extremely uniform –Slight Doppler shift due to Earth’s motion through space –Otherwise, only very tiny fluctuations; smaller than 200 micro-Kelvin ( K)
19
Uniformity of CMB COBE satellite measurements (which improved on discovery of Penzias & Wilson) show … –CMB temperature is 2.725 K –Exactly the same temperature no matter which direction you look in the sky! at the time of recombination, the universe was extremely uniform –Slight Doppler shift due to Earth’s motion through space –Otherwise, only very tiny fluctuations; smaller than 200 micro-Kelvin ( K)
20
Uniformity of CMB COBE satellite measurements (which improved on discovery of Penzias & Wilson) show … –CMB temperature is 2.725 K –Exactly the same temperature no matter which direction you look in the sky! at the time of recombination, the universe was extremely uniform –Slight Doppler shift due to Earth’s motion through space –Otherwise, only very tiny fluctuations; smaller than 200 micro-Kelvin ( K)
24
Uniformity of CMB COBE satellite measurements (which improved on discovery of Penzias & Wilson) show … –CMB temperature is 2.725 K –Exactly the same temperature no matter which direction you look in the sky! at the time of recombination, the universe was extremely uniform –Slight Doppler shift due to Earth’s motion through space –Otherwise, only very tiny fluctuations; smaller than 200 micro-Kelvin ( K) – confirmed by WMAP spacecraft
27
Implications of Big Bang Era of “recombination” and “Cosmic Microwave Background (CMB)” Origin of the Elements Non-uniformities in the Early Universe and the Origin of Galaxies
32
Implications of Big Bang Era of “recombination” and “Cosmic Microwave Background (CMB)” Origin of the Elements Non-uniformities in the Early Universe and the Origin of Galaxies
33
Origin of the Elements Looking back even further in time – before recombination – the universe was even hotter At a sufficiently early epoch it was too hot for any atomic nuclei heavier than Hydrogen to have existed! When did the first elements form; and which ones were able to form? ANS: In the “first 3 minutes”; and only Helium!
36
Origin of the Elements Looking back even further in time – before recombination – the universe was even hotter At a sufficiently early epoch it was too hot for any atomic nuclei heavier than Hydrogen to have existed! When did the first elements form; and which ones were able to form? ANS: In the “first 3 minutes”; and only Helium!
38
Origin of the Elements Looking back even further in time – before recombination – the universe was even hotter At a sufficiently early epoch it was too hot for any atomic nuclei heavier than Hydrogen to have existed! When did the first elements form; and which ones were able to form?
41
Origin of the Elements Looking back even further in time – before recombination – the universe was even hotter At a sufficiently early epoch it was too hot for any atomic nuclei heavier than Hydrogen to have existed! When did the first elements form; and which ones were able to form? ANS: In the “first 3 minutes”; and only Helium!
44
How Do We Measure 0 ? Measure (count up) all the matter density in the universe ( 0 ) and compare the value to c. Measure distances and redshifts of even more distant galaxies and look for deviations in the Hubble diagram.
49
Modern Hubble Law implies: 0 = m +
Similar presentations
© 2025 SlidePlayer.com. Inc.
All rights reserved.