ISkylab 4 Two rungs of cosmic distance ladder –First measure distance to Cepheids with parallax,...

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iSkylab 4 • Two rungs of cosmic distance ladder – First measure distance to Cepheids with parallax, also note their periods – Establish period-luminosity relationship as slope of luminosity vs period graph (L comes from B=L/(4π d 2 ) – Then observe two other Cepheids in two galaxies, determine luminosity from period, distance from B=L/(4π d 2 ) – Redshift gives recessional velocity Hubble’s constant as slope in velocity vs distance plot

Transcript of ISkylab 4 Two rungs of cosmic distance ladder –First measure distance to Cepheids with parallax,...

Page 1: ISkylab 4 Two rungs of cosmic distance ladder –First measure distance to Cepheids with parallax, also note their periods –Establish period-luminosity relationship.

iSkylab 4• Two rungs of cosmic distance ladder

– First measure distance to Cepheids with parallax, also note their periods

– Establish period-luminosity relationship as slope of luminosity vs period graph (L comes from B=L/(4π d2)

– Then observe two other Cepheids in two galaxies, determine luminosity from period, distance from B=L/(4π d2)

– Redshift gives recessional velocity Hubble’s constant as slope in velocity vs distance plot

Page 2: ISkylab 4 Two rungs of cosmic distance ladder –First measure distance to Cepheids with parallax, also note their periods –Establish period-luminosity relationship.

General Relativity ?! That’s easy!

(Actually, it took Prof. Einstein 10 years to come up with that!)

Rμν -1/2 gμν R = 8πG/c4 Tμν

OK, fine, but what does that mean?

Page 3: ISkylab 4 Two rungs of cosmic distance ladder –First measure distance to Cepheids with parallax, also note their periods –Establish period-luminosity relationship.

Planetary Orbits

Sun Planet’s orbit

Page 4: ISkylab 4 Two rungs of cosmic distance ladder –First measure distance to Cepheids with parallax, also note their periods –Establish period-luminosity relationship.

More General than Special Relativity

• General Relativity is more general in the sense that we drop the restriction that an observer not be accelerated

• The claim is that you cannot decide whether you are in a gravitational field, or just an accelerated observer

• The Einstein field equations describe the geometric properties of spacetime

Page 5: ISkylab 4 Two rungs of cosmic distance ladder –First measure distance to Cepheids with parallax, also note their periods –Establish period-luminosity relationship.

The Idea behind General Relativity

– We view space and time as a whole, we call it four-dimensional space-time.

• It has an unusual geometry, as we have seen

– Space-time is warped by the presence of masses like the sun, so “Mass tells space how to bend”

– Objects (like planets) travel in “straight” lines through this curved space (we see this as orbits), so

“Space tells matter how to move”

Page 6: ISkylab 4 Two rungs of cosmic distance ladder –First measure distance to Cepheids with parallax, also note their periods –Establish period-luminosity relationship.

Effects of General Relativity

Bending of starlight by the Sun's gravitational field (and other gravitational lensing effects)

Page 7: ISkylab 4 Two rungs of cosmic distance ladder –First measure distance to Cepheids with parallax, also note their periods –Establish period-luminosity relationship.

Assumption: Cosmological Principle

• The Cosmological Principle: on very large scales (1000 Mpc and up) the universe is homogeneous and isotropic

• Reasonably well-supported by observation

• Means the universe has no edge and no center – the ultimate Copernican principle!

Page 8: ISkylab 4 Two rungs of cosmic distance ladder –First measure distance to Cepheids with parallax, also note their periods –Establish period-luminosity relationship.

What General Relativity tells us

• The more mass there is in the universe, the more “braking” of expansion there is

• So the game is:

Mass vs. Expansion

And we can even calculate who wins!

Page 9: ISkylab 4 Two rungs of cosmic distance ladder –First measure distance to Cepheids with parallax, also note their periods –Establish period-luminosity relationship.

The Fate of the Universe – determined by a single number!

• Critical density is the density required to just barely stop the expansion

• We’ll use 0 = actual density/critical density:

0 = 1 means it’s a tie 0 > 1 means the universe will recollapse (Big Crunch)

Mass wins! 0 < 1 means gravity not strong enough to halt the expansion

Expansion wins!

• And the number is: 0 < 1 (probably…)

Page 10: ISkylab 4 Two rungs of cosmic distance ladder –First measure distance to Cepheids with parallax, also note their periods –Establish period-luminosity relationship.

The “size” of the Universe – depends on time!

Expansion wins!

It’s a tie!

Mass wins!

Time

Page 11: ISkylab 4 Two rungs of cosmic distance ladder –First measure distance to Cepheids with parallax, also note their periods –Establish period-luminosity relationship.

The Shape of the Universe

• In the basic scenario there is a simple relation between the density and the shape of space-time:

Density Curvature 2-D example Universe Time & Space

0>1 positive sphere closed, bound finite

0=1 zero (flat) plane open, marginal infinite

0<1 negative saddle open, unbound infinite

        

                                         

Page 12: ISkylab 4 Two rungs of cosmic distance ladder –First measure distance to Cepheids with parallax, also note their periods –Establish period-luminosity relationship.

Back to: Expansion of the Universe

• Either it grows forever

• Or it comes to a standstill

• Or it falls back and collapses (“Big crunch”)

• In any case: Expansion slows down!Surprise of the year 1998(Birthday of Dark Energy):

All wrong! It accelerates!

Page 13: ISkylab 4 Two rungs of cosmic distance ladder –First measure distance to Cepheids with parallax, also note their periods –Establish period-luminosity relationship.

Enter: The Cosmological Constant

• Physical origin of 0

is unclear• Einstein’s biggest

blunder – or not !• Appears to be small

but not quite zero!• Particle Physics’

biggest failure

• Usually denoted 0, it represents a uniform pressure which either helps or retards the expansion (depending on its sign)

Page 14: ISkylab 4 Two rungs of cosmic distance ladder –First measure distance to Cepheids with parallax, also note their periods –Establish period-luminosity relationship.

Triple evidence for Dark Energy

• Supernova data

• Large scale structure of the cosmos

• Microwave background

                                           

                                                   

Page 15: ISkylab 4 Two rungs of cosmic distance ladder –First measure distance to Cepheids with parallax, also note their periods –Establish period-luminosity relationship.

Microwave Background: Signal from the Big Bang

• Heat from the Big Bang should still be around, although red-shifted by the subsequent expansion

• Predicted to be a blackbody spectrum with a characteristic temperature of 2.725 Kelvin by George Gamow (1948)

Cosmic Microwave Background Radiation (CMB)

Page 16: ISkylab 4 Two rungs of cosmic distance ladder –First measure distance to Cepheids with parallax, also note their periods –Establish period-luminosity relationship.

Discovery of Cosmic Microwave Background Radiation (CMB)

• Penzias and Wilson (1964)

• Tried to “debug” their horn antenna

• Couldn’t get rid of “background noise”

Signal from Big Bang• Very, very isotropic (1

part in 100,000)

Page 17: ISkylab 4 Two rungs of cosmic distance ladder –First measure distance to Cepheids with parallax, also note their periods –Establish period-luminosity relationship.

CMB: Here’s how it looks like!Peak as expected from 3 Kelvin warm object

Shape as expected from black body

Page 18: ISkylab 4 Two rungs of cosmic distance ladder –First measure distance to Cepheids with parallax, also note their periods –Establish period-luminosity relationship.

Latest Results: PLANCK

• Measure fluctuations in microwave background• Expect typical size of fluctuation of ½ degree if universe

is flat• Result:

Universe is flat !

Page 19: ISkylab 4 Two rungs of cosmic distance ladder –First measure distance to Cepheids with parallax, also note their periods –Establish period-luminosity relationship.

Experiment and Theory

Expect “accoustic peak” at l=200

There it is!

Page 20: ISkylab 4 Two rungs of cosmic distance ladder –First measure distance to Cepheids with parallax, also note their periods –Establish period-luminosity relationship.

Supernova Data

• Type Ia Supernovae are standard candles• Can calculate distance from brightness• Can measure redshift• General relativity gives us distance as a function of redshift for a given universeSupernovae are further away than expected for any decelerating (“standard”) universe

Page 21: ISkylab 4 Two rungs of cosmic distance ladder –First measure distance to Cepheids with parallax, also note their periods –Establish period-luminosity relationship.

Pie in the Sky: Content of the Universe

We know almost everything about almost nothing!

1

2

3

23%

5%

72%

Dark EnergyDark MatterSM MatterSM Matter

Page 22: ISkylab 4 Two rungs of cosmic distance ladder –First measure distance to Cepheids with parallax, also note their periods –Establish period-luminosity relationship.

Properties of Dark Energy

• Should be able to explain acceleration of cosmic expansion acts like a negative pressure

• Must not mess up structure formation or nucleosynthesis

• Does not dilute as the universe expands will be different % of content of universe as time goes by

Page 23: ISkylab 4 Two rungs of cosmic distance ladder –First measure distance to Cepheids with parallax, also note their periods –Establish period-luminosity relationship.

Threefold Evidence

Three independent measurements agree:

•Universe is flat•28 % Matter•72 % dark energy

Page 24: ISkylab 4 Two rungs of cosmic distance ladder –First measure distance to Cepheids with parallax, also note their periods –Establish period-luminosity relationship.

Cosmic Inflation• Size of the universe suddenly increased

exponentially

Page 25: ISkylab 4 Two rungs of cosmic distance ladder –First measure distance to Cepheids with parallax, also note their periods –Establish period-luminosity relationship.

Consequences

• Fluctuations at a tiny

• fraction of a second when all parts of the universe talked to each other (to make sure everyone was at the same temperature)

• Suddenly fluctuations are enlarged

• Fluctuations become imprinted on CMB, provide seeds for large scale structure of universe (clups that grow into galaxies)

Page 26: ISkylab 4 Two rungs of cosmic distance ladder –First measure distance to Cepheids with parallax, also note their periods –Establish period-luminosity relationship.

Inflation solves the Horizon Problem

• How does one side of the universe know what temperature the other side is at?

• It has no way, because light (signal velocity) is too slow

• Need inflation at larger than light speed

Page 27: ISkylab 4 Two rungs of cosmic distance ladder –First measure distance to Cepheids with parallax, also note their periods –Establish period-luminosity relationship.

History of the Universe: Hot & small cold & big

before 10-43 s ?????? (“Planck Era”)

10-43 s T=1032 K gravity splits from other forces

10-43 to 10-35 s Grand Unification era

10-35 s T=1028 K Strong force splits from others. Epoch of inflation?

10-35 s to 10-10 s “Electroweak era”

10-10 s T=1015 KElectromagnetic force splits from others

10-10 to 10-4 s “Quark era”

10-4 s T=1013 K Quarks combine to form protons and neutrons

10-4 to 500,000 years Radiation era

180 s (3 minutes) T=109 K Protons and neutrons combine to form nuclei (mainly Helium,

deuterium)

500,000 years T=3,000 K Nuclei and electrons combine toform atoms – Decoupling

500,000 years to present Matter era