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Lecture 20 Hubble Time – Scale Factor ASTR 340 Fall 2006 Dennis Papadopoulos
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Lecture 20 Hubble Time – Scale Factor ASTR 340 Fall 2006 Dennis Papadopoulos.

Dec 17, 2015

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Page 1: Lecture 20 Hubble Time – Scale Factor ASTR 340 Fall 2006 Dennis Papadopoulos.

Lecture 20Hubble Time – Scale Factor

ASTR 340

Fall 2006

Dennis Papadopoulos

Page 2: Lecture 20 Hubble Time – Scale Factor ASTR 340 Fall 2006 Dennis Papadopoulos.

Hubble’s Law• Hubble interpreted redshift-distance relationship as a

linear increase of the recession velocity of external galaxies with their distance

• Mathematically, the Hubble law is v=Hd where v=velocity and d=distance• Modern measurement gives the Hubble constant as

H=72 km/s/Mpc• In fact, Hubble’s interpretation is only “sort of” correct• What really increases linearly with distance is simply

wavelength of light observed, and this redshift is due to the cosmological expansion of space over the time since the light left the distant galaxy and arrived at the Milky Way!

Page 3: Lecture 20 Hubble Time – Scale Factor ASTR 340 Fall 2006 Dennis Papadopoulos.

SPACE TIME STRUCTURE – THE METRIC EQUATION

2 2 2

2 2 22

r x y

r f x g x y h y

f, g, h Metric coefficients

2 2 2 2 2 2cosr R R sphere

Metric is invariant

2 2 2 2s c t c t x x 2D space-time metric

Page 4: Lecture 20 Hubble Time – Scale Factor ASTR 340 Fall 2006 Dennis Papadopoulos.

POSSIBLE GEOMETRIES FOR THE UNIVERSE

• The Cosmological Principles constrain the possible geometries for the space-time that describes Universe on large scales.

• The problem at hand - to find curved 4-d space-times which are both homogeneous and isotropic…

• Solution to this mathematical problem is the Friedmann-Robertson-Walker (FRW) metric.

Page 5: Lecture 20 Hubble Time – Scale Factor ASTR 340 Fall 2006 Dennis Papadopoulos.

Cosmological Principle

– Universe is homogeneous – every place in the universe has the same conditions as every other place, on average.

– Universe is isotropic – there is no preferred direction in the universe, on average.

• Ignoring details…– All matter in universe is “smoothed” out– ignore details like stars and galaxies, but deal with a

smooth distribution of matter

Page 6: Lecture 20 Hubble Time – Scale Factor ASTR 340 Fall 2006 Dennis Papadopoulos.

Observational evidence for homogeneity and isotropy

• Let’s look into space… see how matter is distributed on large scales.

• “Redshift surveys”…– Make 3-d map of galaxy

positions– Use redshift & Hubble’s

law to determine distance

Page 7: Lecture 20 Hubble Time – Scale Factor ASTR 340 Fall 2006 Dennis Papadopoulos.

CfA redshiftsurvey

Each point is a bright galaxy

Page 8: Lecture 20 Hubble Time – Scale Factor ASTR 340 Fall 2006 Dennis Papadopoulos.

Las CampanasRedshift survey

Page 9: Lecture 20 Hubble Time – Scale Factor ASTR 340 Fall 2006 Dennis Papadopoulos.

Friedmann-Robertson-Walker metric• A “metric” describes how the space-time intervals relate to local

changes in the coordinates• We are already familiar with the formula for the space-time

interval in flat space (generalized for arbitrary space coordinate scale factor R):

• In terms of radius and angles instead of x,y,z, this is written:

• General solution for isotropic, homogeneous curved space is:

• And in fact, in general the scale factor may be a function of time, i.e. R(t)

s2 (ct)2 R2 r2

1 kr2 2 sin2()2

s2 (ct)2 R2 x 2 y 2 z2

s2 (ct)2 R2 r2 2 sin2()2

Page 10: Lecture 20 Hubble Time – Scale Factor ASTR 340 Fall 2006 Dennis Papadopoulos.

Curvature in the FRW metric

• This introduces the curvature constant, k• Three possible cases…

Spherical spaces (closed; k=+1)

Page 11: Lecture 20 Hubble Time – Scale Factor ASTR 340 Fall 2006 Dennis Papadopoulos.

Flat spaces (open; k=0)

Hyperbolic spaces (open; k=-1)

Page 12: Lecture 20 Hubble Time – Scale Factor ASTR 340 Fall 2006 Dennis Papadopoulos.

Meaning of the scale factor, R.

• Scale factor, R, is a central concept!– R tells you how “big” the space is… – Allows you to talk about changing the size of the space

(expansion and contraction of the Universe - even if the Universe is infinite).

• Simplest example is k=+1 case (sphere)– Scale factor is just the radius of the sphere

R=1 R=2R=0.5

Page 13: Lecture 20 Hubble Time – Scale Factor ASTR 340 Fall 2006 Dennis Papadopoulos.

• What about k=-1 (hyperbolic) universe?– Scale factor gives “radius of curvature”

• For k=0 universe, there is no curvature… shape is unchanged as universe changes its scale (stretching a flat rubber sheet)

R=1 R=2

Page 14: Lecture 20 Hubble Time – Scale Factor ASTR 340 Fall 2006 Dennis Papadopoulos.

Co-moving coordinates.• What do the coordinates x,y,z or r,, represent? • They are positions of a body (e.g. a galaxy) in the space that

describes the Universe• Thus, x can represent the separation between two galaxies• But what if the size of the space itself changes?• EG suppose space is sphere, and has a grid of coordinates on

surface, with two points at a given latitudes and longitudes 1,1 and 2,2

• If sphere expands, the two points would have the same latitudes and longitudes as before, but distance between them would increase

• Coordinates defined this way are called comoving coordinates

Page 15: Lecture 20 Hubble Time – Scale Factor ASTR 340 Fall 2006 Dennis Papadopoulos.

• If a galaxy remains at rest relative to the overall space (i.e. with respect to the average positions of everything else in space) then it has fixed co-moving coordinates.

• Consider two galaxies that have fixed co-moving coordinates.– Let’s define a “co-moving” distance D– Then, the real (proper) distance between the

galaxies is d=R(t) D

Page 16: Lecture 20 Hubble Time – Scale Factor ASTR 340 Fall 2006 Dennis Papadopoulos.

DtR )(

DttR )(

Galaxies and galaxy clusters gravitationally bound. Their meter length does not change with expansion

Page 17: Lecture 20 Hubble Time – Scale Factor ASTR 340 Fall 2006 Dennis Papadopoulos.
Page 18: Lecture 20 Hubble Time – Scale Factor ASTR 340 Fall 2006 Dennis Papadopoulos.
Page 19: Lecture 20 Hubble Time – Scale Factor ASTR 340 Fall 2006 Dennis Papadopoulos.
Page 20: Lecture 20 Hubble Time – Scale Factor ASTR 340 Fall 2006 Dennis Papadopoulos.
Page 21: Lecture 20 Hubble Time – Scale Factor ASTR 340 Fall 2006 Dennis Papadopoulos.

Hubble Law

Page 22: Lecture 20 Hubble Time – Scale Factor ASTR 340 Fall 2006 Dennis Papadopoulos.

Expansion Rate

Page 23: Lecture 20 Hubble Time – Scale Factor ASTR 340 Fall 2006 Dennis Papadopoulos.
Page 24: Lecture 20 Hubble Time – Scale Factor ASTR 340 Fall 2006 Dennis Papadopoulos.
Page 25: Lecture 20 Hubble Time – Scale Factor ASTR 340 Fall 2006 Dennis Papadopoulos.

Hubble Time

Hubble sphere

DH

Page 26: Lecture 20 Hubble Time – Scale Factor ASTR 340 Fall 2006 Dennis Papadopoulos.

Acceleration-Decceleration

Page 27: Lecture 20 Hubble Time – Scale Factor ASTR 340 Fall 2006 Dennis Papadopoulos.

Scale Factor –Robertson Walker Metric• According to GR, the possible space-time intervals in a homogeneous,

isotropic Universe are the FRW metric forms with k=0 (flat), k=1 (spherical), k=-1(hyperbolic):

• The scale factor R(t) describes the relative expansion of space as a function of time.

• Both physical distances between galaxies and wavelengths of radiation vary proportional to R(t).

– d(t) =Dcomoving R(t)

(t)=emitted R(t)/R(emitted)

• Observed redshift of radiation from distant source is related to scale factor at emission time (t) and present time (t0) by 1+z=R(t0)/R(t)

• Hubble observed that Universe is currently expanding; expansion can be characterized by H=(Rt)/R

• For nearby galaxies, v=dH0 ,where the present value of the Hubble parameter is approximately H0 =70 km/s/Mpc

s2 (ct)2 R(t)2 r2

1 kr2 2 sin2()2

Page 28: Lecture 20 Hubble Time – Scale Factor ASTR 340 Fall 2006 Dennis Papadopoulos.

Interpretation of Hubble law in terms of relativity

• New way to look at redshifts observed by Hubble • Redshift is not due to velocity of galaxies

– Galaxies are (approximately) stationary in space… – Galaxies get further apart because the space between

them is physically expanding!– The expansion of space, as R(t) in the metric equation, also

affects the wavelength of light… as space expands, the wavelength expands and so there is a redshift.

• So, cosmological redshift is due to cosmological expansion of wavelength of light, not the regular Doppler shift from local motions.