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The Early Universe I AST 112
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The Early Universe I

Jan 02, 2016

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The Early Universe I. AST 112. Review: Hubble’s Law. Space is expanding in all directions This is carrying everything away from everything else This does not apply to objects that are bound by gravity When light is emitted by an object, it travels in expanding space - PowerPoint PPT Presentation
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Page 1: The Early Universe I

The Early Universe I

AST 112

Page 2: The Early Universe I

Review: Hubble’s Law

• Space is expanding in all directions– This is carrying everything away from everything else– This does not apply to objects that are bound by

gravity

• When light is emitted by an object, it travels in expanding space– Its wavelength gets stretched– It becomes more red

Page 3: The Early Universe I

The Age of the Universe

• Galaxy A is 1 MLY (9.46 x 1018 km) away and receding at 22 km/s (6.94 x 108 km/yr). At that speed, how long has it been expanding away from us?

13.6 billion years

• Galaxy B is 2 MLY away and receding at 44 km/s. At that speed, how long has it been expanding away from us?

13.6 billion years

Page 4: The Early Universe I

The space in which galaxies live has beenexpanding since the beginning.

Everything has been expanding awayfrom everything else.

If we “rewind”, what happens?

Page 5: The Early Universe I

The Early Universe

• Galaxies hadn’t formed when the Universe was significantly more crammed than it is

• But there was still plenty of matter and energy. What would it have been like?

Page 6: The Early Universe I

The Early Universe

• Nuclear physicists at Princeton were starting to figure this out

• Hot, dense primordial “fog” of H and He

• George Gamow calculated that the fog in the early universe could only consist of H and He– Not able to fuse into heavier elements

Page 7: The Early Universe I

Looking Back In Time

If the Universe used to be a thick, glowingfog of hydrogen and helium, shouldn’t we be

able to see the glow?

(What color is a hot, dense objectat 6000 oF?)

Page 8: The Early Universe I

Looking Back In Time

Photons leftover from the hydrogen fog are everywhere. We can observe them.

Why can’t we walk outside and see it?

Page 9: The Early Universe I

The Early Universe

• So what do we see when we look at the youngest galaxies?– H and He!

• What do we see when we try to look past the youngest galaxies?– We run into the fog!– The fog is opaque.– The fog is redshifted into microwaves.– So there’s a glowing fog that we cannot see (not in visible light),

into which we cannot see.

• So what do we see?

Page 10: The Early Universe I

Looking Back In Time

• Can only look so far back

• Universe used to be opaque – Can’t see light from before then

• Particle physics and computers tell us what happened beyond where we cannot see

Page 11: The Early Universe I

An Annoying Hiss, A Pigeon, and the Early Universe

• Arno Penzias and Robert Wilson (1965):

– Set up a sensitive microwave antenna for satellite communications

– Kept finding “noise” in all directions

Page 12: The Early Universe I

An Annoying Hiss, A Pigeon, and the Early Universe

Page 13: The Early Universe I

An Annoying Hiss, A Pigeon, and the Early Universe

Page 14: The Early Universe I

An Annoying Hiss, A Pigeon, and the Early Universe

Page 15: The Early Universe I

An Annoying Hiss, A Pigeon, and the Early Universe

Page 16: The Early Universe I

An Annoying Hiss, A Pigeon, and the Early Universe

After tightening screws, removing the pigeon,and removing the pigeon again…

The hiss remained!

Page 17: The Early Universe I

An Annoying Hiss, A Pigeon, and the Early Universe

• Penzias and Wilson planned to “bury” this nuisance in a paper

• Meanwhile:– Princeton physicists calculated characteristics of

radiation from Big Bang– Should fill the Universe, can see it in all directions– Should be detectable with…

Page 18: The Early Universe I

… a microwave detector!

Page 19: The Early Universe I

Cosmic Microwave Background (CMB)

• On an airplane trip, Penzias sat by someone who knew of the Princeton calculations

• “Compared notes”: This “noise” in the antenna IS the leftover radiation from the Big Bang!

Page 20: The Early Universe I

Cosmic Microwave Background (CMB)

Page 21: The Early Universe I
Page 22: The Early Universe I

Cosmic Microwave Background (CMB)

• This is an image of “hydrogen fog radiation” over the entire sky

Page 23: The Early Universe I

Cosmic Microwave Background (CMB)

• 1990’s: COBE launched– Cosmic Background

Explorer

• The curve is the expected thermal spectrum

• The points are what COBE measured

Page 24: The Early Universe I

Cosmic Microwave Background (CMB)

This graph is exactly what we wouldexpect for a single mass of hot plasma

that cooled off.

Page 25: The Early Universe I

Cosmic Microwave Background (CMB)

• If you take an antenna-fed TV:

– Turn to a channel for which there is no local station, and you get snow

– 1% of this snow is from photons in the CMB

Page 26: The Early Universe I

Receding CMB

• The particles responsible for the CMB are 45.7 billion LY away

• The observable universe ends at 62 billion LY

• As space expands, the CMB will disappear from the observable universe!

Page 27: The Early Universe I

The Big Bang

• The two strongest, most cited pieces of evidence for the Big Bang:

– Hubble expansion

– Cosmic microwave background