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VERY Early Universe Tuesday, January Tuesday, January 29 29 (planetarium show tonight: 7 pm, 5 (planetarium show tonight: 7 pm, 5 th th floor Smith floor Smith
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VERY Early Universe

Dec 30, 2015

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VERY Early Universe. Tuesday, January 29 (planetarium show tonight: 7 pm, 5 th floor Smith Lab). It’s about time!. Different calendars have different starting times (birth of Christ, hijra to Medina, etc.). The Big Bang (start of expansion) provides an absolute zero for time. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation
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Page 1: VERY Early Universe

VERY Early Universe

Tuesday, January 29Tuesday, January 29 (planetarium show tonight: 7 pm, 5(planetarium show tonight: 7 pm, 5thth floor floor

Smith Lab)Smith Lab)

Page 2: VERY Early Universe

It’s about time!

Different calendars have different starting times (birth of Christ,

hijra to Medina, etc.)

The Big Bang (start of expansion) provides an absolute zeroabsolute zero for time.

Page 3: VERY Early Universe

Universe started expanding at a time t = 0t = 0.

What is the currentcurrent time t = tt = t00? (That is, how much time has elapsed since the Big Bang?)

We’ve already answered that question (approximately).

Page 4: VERY Early Universe

1/H0, called the “HubbleHubble timetime”, is the approximate age of the

universe in the Big Bang Model.

At a finite time in the past (t ≈ 1/H0), the universe began in a very dense state.

Flashback slide!

Page 5: VERY Early Universe

The Hubble time, 1/H0, is approximately equal to t0 (time elapsed since Big Bang).

If expansion has been slowing downslowing down, the universe is younger younger than 1/H0.

If expansion has been speeding upspeeding up, the universe is olderolder.

Page 6: VERY Early Universe

Redshift (z) of a distant object: measure of how much the universe has

expanded since light was emitted.

Since universe has been expanding continuously, each zz corresponds to a

unique time tt.

Page 7: VERY Early Universe

Looking at the Cosmic Microwave Background:

z ≈ 1000, t ≈ 350,000 years

Page 8: VERY Early Universe

As time (t) increases, density and temperature decreasedecrease.

Page 9: VERY Early Universe

What the *&@% do I mean by “thethe temperature of the early universe”?

Today, the universe is full of things with many different temperatures.

The earlyearly universe was dense: particles frequently collided, and came to the same same equilibrium temperature.

Page 10: VERY Early Universe

The very early universe was a nearly homogeneous “soup” of

elementary particles.

Page 11: VERY Early Universe

Particle Physics for Dummies

Electron: low mass, negative charge

Proton: higher mass, positive charge

Neutron: ≈ proton mass, no charge

Neutrino: VERY low mass, no charge

Page 12: VERY Early Universe

Neutrinos, they are very small. They have no charge and have no mass And do not interact at all. The earth is just a silly ball To them,

through which they simply pass, Like dustmaids down a drafty hall Or

photons through a pane of glass.

Cosmic Gall (John Updike)

What’s a photon?What’s a photon?

Page 13: VERY Early Universe

A photonphoton is a particleparticle of light.

On very small scales, the laws of quantum mechanicsquantum mechanics apply.

One of these laws states that a particle can have the properties of

a wave, and vice versa.

Page 14: VERY Early Universe

This concept of “wave-particle duality” is mind-bending but useful.

Light of a given color can be treated as: 1) waves of a given wavelengthwavelength

2) photons of a given energyenergy

Page 15: VERY Early Universe

EnergyEnergy can be measured in BTUs, kilowatt-hours, calories, ergs, etc…

The energy of individual particles is usually measured in electron-voltselectron-volts.

1 electron-volt (eV) is the energy gained by an electron when its

electrical potential increases by 1 volt.

Page 16: VERY Early Universe

An electron-volt is a tinytiny amount of energy, appropriate for dealing with

single particles and atoms.

photon of red light: energy = 1.8 eV

photon of violetviolet light: energy = 3.1 eV

Page 17: VERY Early Universe

The temperature TT of the early universe determines the average

particle energy EE.

K 10,000

TeV 3 E

Page 18: VERY Early Universe

t T E

30,000 yr 10,000 K 3 eV

12 days 10 million K 3 keV

1 second 10 billion K 3 MeV

10-6 sec 10 trillion K 3 GeV

1 GeV = 1 billion electron-volts = energy of a gamma ray photon

Page 19: VERY Early Universe

How far back in How far back in time dare we go?time dare we go?

Page 20: VERY Early Universe

Looking againagain at the CMB:

z ≈ 1000, t ≈ 350,000 years, T ≈ 3000 K

Universe became transparent because hydrogen went from ionized to neutral.

Page 21: VERY Early Universe

It takes 13.6 eV of energy to ionize a hydrogen atom.

Any photon with E > 13.6 eV (ultraviolet, X-ray, gamma-ray)

can ionize hydrogen.

Hydrogen atom:Hydrogen atom: a proton and electron

held together by electrostatic attraction.

Page 22: VERY Early Universe

At T = 3000 K, some photons are energetic enough

to ionize hydrogen.

At T < 3000 K, hydrogen forms

neutral atoms: too few ionizing photons! 13.6 eV 13.6 eV

photonsphotons

Page 23: VERY Early Universe

It takes 2,200,000 eV of energy to dissociate a deuterium nucleus.

Any photon with E > 2.2 MeV (gamma-ray) can dissociate deuterium.

Deuterium nucleus:Deuterium nucleus: a proton and

neutronneutron held together by strong nuclear strong nuclear

forceforce.

nucleus

Page 24: VERY Early Universe

If hydrogen atoms are safe from ionization when T < 3000 K, then deuterium nuclei will be safe from dissociation when

T < ???160,000K 3000

eV6.13

eV000,200,2K 3000

K10 4.8 8

Page 25: VERY Early Universe

The temperature of the universe fell below 480 million K when

its age was t ≈ 7 minutes.

Photons were no longer energetic enough to blast apart deuterium nuclei.

Deuterium nuclei could form and be safe from destruction.

Page 26: VERY Early Universe

p + n → D + γ

Primordial nucleosynthesis:

proton neutron deuterium nucleus

gamma ray (energetic photon)

The very early universe was a nuclear fusion reactor.

Page 27: VERY Early Universe

There’s not a lot of deuterium in the universe today. Why not?

Because fusion continued:

D + n → T + γ

tritium nucleus

Page 28: VERY Early Universe

There’s not a lot of tritiumtritium in the universe today. Why not?

For one thing, tritium is unstable. For another, fusion continued:

T + p → He + γ

helium nucleus

Page 29: VERY Early Universe

Before primordial nucleosynthesis, there were 2 neutrons for every 14 protons. (Neutrons tend to decay into protons.)

Page 30: VERY Early Universe

2 neutrons combine with 2 protons to form 1 stable helium nucleus, with 12 lonely

protons (hydrogen nuclei) left over.

Page 31: VERY Early Universe

25% of the initial protons & neutrons (and hence 25% of their mass) should be in

helium: the rest will be hydrogen.

Page 32: VERY Early Universe

When we look at the spectra of the first stars that formed, they consist of 25% helium by mass, and 75% hydrogen.

TRIUMPH FOR PRIMORDIAL TRIUMPH FOR PRIMORDIAL NUCLEOSYNTHESIS!NUCLEOSYNTHESIS!

There’s just the amount of H & He that was predicted.

Page 33: VERY Early Universe

nucleo-nucleo-synthesissynthesis

trans- trans- parencyparency

galaxy galaxy formationformation

7 min7 min 350,000 yr350,000 yr 1 billion yr1 billion yr

Page 34: VERY Early Universe

Gosh! We understand what the universe was like when it was a

few minutes old!

1) At t < 1 minute, things get more speculative.

2) Cosmologists love to speculate.

Page 35: VERY Early Universe

Thursday’s Lecture:

Reading:

Chapter 5

Gravity and the Expanding Universe