astrophysics cosmology - the study of the nature of the universe

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Astrophysics Cosmology - the study of the nature of the universe

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Page 1: Astrophysics Cosmology - the study of the nature of the universe

AstrophysicsCosmology - the study of the

nature of the universe

Page 2: Astrophysics Cosmology - the study of the nature of the universe

1. The cosmological principle has a profound role in the development of cosmology. Describe the principles of homogeneity and isotropy.

Homogeneity - the universe looks uniform - uniform

Isotropy - no one direction is special in comparison with any other direction

Page 3: Astrophysics Cosmology - the study of the nature of the universe

2. How would the principles of homogeneity and isotropy be

violated in the universe had an edge or a center?

Edge - part near the edge would look different

Center - looking from the center would show a different picture than from any other point

Page 4: Astrophysics Cosmology - the study of the nature of the universe

3. In your own words, describe Olber’s Paradox.

The stars are on a series of shells. Each shell contributes the same amount of energy (closer shells have fewer stars but appear brighter).

The are an infinite number of shells, so total energy is infinite. The night sky should be infinitely bright, but it is not.

Page 5: Astrophysics Cosmology - the study of the nature of the universe

4. What are three reasons why the radiation received by an observer is small and

finite?1. There are a finite number of stars with a finite life - the total radiation is small and finite compared to an infinite number of stars with an infinite life.

2. Some stars are so far away that the light hasn’t had enough time to reach us.

3. Received radiation is red-shifted and contains less energy (remember E=hf?)

Page 6: Astrophysics Cosmology - the study of the nature of the universe

5. Describe how Red Shift supports the Big Bang Theory of

an expanding universe.

The dark lines in absorption spectra are red-shifted (shifted toward the red end of the spectrum)

Red light has a longer and a lower f, indicating that the universe is expanding outward (remember the Doppler Effect?)

Emission spectra are also red-shifted, but they are usually too faint to see

Page 7: Astrophysics Cosmology - the study of the nature of the universe

6. Explain the statement: The universe is not expanding

into empty space.The galaxies moving away from us aren’t moving into empty space- space is being created between the galaxies

The increasing distance between the galaxies creates an illusion of galaxies moving relative to each other

Page 8: Astrophysics Cosmology - the study of the nature of the universe

7. According to Penzias and Wilson, there is background

radiation in the universe, filling all space. Where do they believe

that it comes from?

It is uniform in all directionsIt is the remnant of the hot explosion at the beginning of time

It is the afterglow of an enormous temperature from an early universe - temperature of space has fallen to 2.7K

Page 9: Astrophysics Cosmology - the study of the nature of the universe

8. How old is the universe? Describe the

Big Bang Theory.

The universe is 14 billion years old.It started as infinitesimally small (single point) with enormous heat and pressure

At t=0 a gigantic explosion set matter moving outward - distant galaxies are receding

Page 10: Astrophysics Cosmology - the study of the nature of the universe

9. What is the main experimental evidence in support

of the Big Bang Theory?

1. Expanding universe2. Cosmic background radiation3. Helium abundance - 25% of the universe by mass

Page 11: Astrophysics Cosmology - the study of the nature of the universe

10. Distinguish between a closed, open,and flat universe. How are they

related to critical density?

Geometry Density

Type Volume Expansion

hyperbolic p<pc open infinite forever

Euclidean p=pc flat (open) infinite forever, but slows down

spherical p>pc closed finite stops, followed by collapse

Page 12: Astrophysics Cosmology - the study of the nature of the universe

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Page 13: Astrophysics Cosmology - the study of the nature of the universe

11. How is critical density estimated?

Estimated using Hubble’s Law, energy, and approximated as a sphere

Critical density of the universe 10-26 kg-m-3

Page 14: Astrophysics Cosmology - the study of the nature of the universe

12. How do WIMPS and MACHOS make it difficult to estimate

the mass density of the universe?

WIMPS - weakly interactive massive particles - include neutrinos and other particles

Neutrino masses are not yet determined

MACHOS - mass compact halo objects, include objects like black and brown dwarfs

Dwarfs are dark matter - too cold to radiate - can’t see them