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Published byTheodora Horn Modified over 9 years ago
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Today: “Nucleosynthesis… another phase change in early universe… and why is the Universe so Flat?” HW for next time: Onion, “the nucleus and forces of nature” chapters 3 & 4 reminder: use the Glossary Session 7: 2/6/07 ? min
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geometry of universe: determined by total density of matter & energy Density = Critical Density > Critical Density < Critical why is the density ~ critical…i.e. why is our universe so“flat?”
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Inflation flattens overall geometry like blowing up a balloon, overall density of matter plus energy becomes almost critical
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…during the first 3 minutes, Big Bang nucleosynthesis created deuterium (d), 3 He, 4 He, traces of Li…but nothing else at t ~1 minute, universe cooled to temperature T ~ 1MeV, nuclear energies E = kT, 1 MeV ~ 10 10 °K 1/40 eV ~10,000 °K too cool for n↔p equilibrium since m n > m p by 1.3 MeV, m n ~ m p = 1 GeV = 1000 MeV so neutrons weakly decay n → p e beta decay between 1 and 3 minutes, temperature high enough to fuse n + p → d, then d + t → He t=tritium= 3 H not too high to dissociate weakly-bound d 2.2 MeV binding energy nor to destroy very stable 4 He (=α) 24 MeV binding energy at t = 1 min, Big Bang predicts protons:neutrons = 7:1 after 3 minutes, universe too cool to fuse a neutron and proton to deuterium, but all neutrons already bound up in helium! 4 He 2 = α= 2 protons + 2 neutrons (read Steve Weinberg’s “The First Three Minutes”)
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In hot primordial plasma, protons and neutrons combine making ultra-stable, long-lasting helium but universe only hot enough up to ~ 3 minutes of age one of the reaction chains… JET, next ITER
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Big Bang theory prediction: 75% H, 25% He (12/16 vs 4/16 by mass) Matches observations of primordial gases in star forming regions
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Big Bang theory: correctly predicts trace abundances of elements 2 H = d, 3 He, Li? (will discuss horizontal axis when we discuss at dark matter)
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But, can you observing the Big Bang for yourself? the snow on the TV… darkness of the night sky…evidence for Big Bang
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first Kepler, then Olbers’ Paradox If universe were 1) infinite 2) unchanging 3) everywhere the same stars would cover the night sky
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Night sky is dark because the universe changes with time As we look out in space, we can look back to a time when there were no stars
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Night sky is dark because the universe changes with time As we look out in space, we can look back to a time when there were no stars
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…now, in summary a brief history of the universe as motivation for our study of particle physics
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Four known forces in universe: Strong Force Electromagnetism Weak Force Gravity Do forces unify at high temperatures? Yes! Fermilab & Cern Proton Decay (GUT?) Who knows? (String Theory)
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Planck Era Before Planck time (~10 -43 sec) No theory of quantum gravity
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GUT Era Lasts from Planck time (~10 -43 sec) to end of GUT force (~10 -38 sec)
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Electroweak Era Lasts from end of GUT force (~10 -38 sec) to end of electroweak force (~10 -10 sec)
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Quark Era Amounts of matter and antimatter nearly equal (Roughly 1 extra proton for every 10 9 proton- antiproton pairs!)
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Era of Nucleo- synthesis Begins when matter annihilates remaining antimatter at ~ 0.001 sec Nuclei begin to fuse
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Era of Nuclei Helium nuclei form at age ~ 3 minutes Universe has become too cool to blast helium apart
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Era of Atoms Atoms form at age ~ 380,000 years Background radiation released
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Era of Galaxies Galaxies form at age ~ 1 billion years
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RESERVE
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PHOTONS DECOUPLING from H & He atoms once formed interactive
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History of Universe with black body spectra red shifted for each era interactive
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Light from disconnected regions coupled after inflation interactive
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The early universe must have been extremely hot and dense
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