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MASON ASTR 113 - Exploring the Early Universe

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Exploring the Early UniverseGuiding QuestionsThe Isotropy ProblemThe newborn universe may have undergone a brief period of vigorous expansionSlide 5Inflation explains why the universe is nearly flat and the 2.725-K microwave background is almost perfectly isotropicInflation was one of several profound changes that occurred in the very early universeSlide 8Slide 9Slide 10During inflation, all the mass and energy in the universe burst forth from the vacuum of spaceAs the early universe expanded and cooled, most of the matter and antimatter annihilated each otherThe Origin of Matter - NucleosynthesisSlide 14A background of neutrinos and most of the helium in the universe are relics of the primordial fireballSlide 16Galaxies are generally located on the surfaces of roughly spherical voidsGalaxies formed from density fluctuations in the early universeAstronomers use supercomputers to simulate how the large-scale structure of the universe arose from primordial density fluctuationsSlide 20Slide 21Slide 22Slide 23Models based on dark energy and cold dark matter give good agreement with details of the large-scale structureTheories that attempt to unify the physical forces predict that the universe may have 11 dimensionsKey WordsExploring the Early UniverseChapter Twenty-NineGuiding Questions1. Has the universe always expanded as it does today, or might it have suddenly “inflated”?2. How did the fundamental forces of nature and the properties of empty space change during the first second after the Big Bang?3. What is antimatter? How can it be created, and how is it destroyed?4. Why is antimatter so rare today?5. What materials in today’s universe are remnants of nuclear reactions in the hot early universe?6. How did the first galaxies form?7. Are scientists close to developing an all-encompassing “theory of everything”?The Isotropy ProblemThe newborn universe may have undergone a brief period of vigorous expansion•A brief period of rapid expansion, called inflation, is thought to have occurred immediately after the Big Bang•During a tiny fraction of a second, the universe expanded to a size many times larger than it would have reached through its normal expansion rateInflation explains why the universe is nearly flat and the 2.725-K microwave background is almost perfectly isotropicInflation was one of several profound changes thatoccurred in the very early universeFour basic forces—gravity, electromagnetism, the strong force, and the weak force—explain all the interactions observed in the universe•Grand unified theories (GUTs) are attempts to explain three of the forces in terms of a single consistent set of physical laws•A supergrand unified theory would explain all four forces•GUTs suggest that all four physical forces were equivalent just after the Big Bang•However, because we have no satisfactory supergrand unified theory, we can as yet say nothing about the nature of the universe during this period before the Planck time (t = 10–43 s after the Big Bang)•At the Planck time, gravity froze out to become a distinctive force in a spontaneous symmetry breaking•During a second spontaneous symmetry breaking, the strong nuclear force became a distinct force•This transition triggered the rapid inflation of the universe•A final spontaneous symmetry breaking separated the electromagnetic force from the weak nuclear force; from that moment on, the universe behaved as it does todayDuring inflation, all the mass and energy inthe universe burst forth from the vacuum of space•Heisenberg’s uncertainty principle states that the amount of uncertainty in the mass of a subatomic particle increases as it is observed for shorter and shorter time periods•Because of the uncertainty principle, particle-antiparticle pairs can spontaneously form and disappear within a fraction of a second•These pairs, whose presence can be detected only indirectly, are called virtual pairsAs the early universe expanded and cooled, most of the matter and antimatter annihilated each other•A virtual pair can become a real particle-antiparticle pair when high-energy photons collide•In this process, called pair production, the photons disappear, and their energy is replaced by the mass of the particle-antiparticle pair•In the process of annihilation, a colliding particle-antiparticle pair disappears and highenergy photons appearThe Origin of Matter - Nucleosynthesis•Just after the inflationary epoch, the universe was filled with particles and antiparticles formed by pair production and with numerous high-energy photons formed by annihilation•A state of thermal equilibrium existed in this hot plasma•As the universe expanded, its temperature decreased•When the temperature fell below the threshold temperature required to produce each kind of particle, annihilation of that kind of particle began to dominate over production•Matter is much more prevalent than antimatter in the present day universe•This is because particles and antiparticles were not created in exactly equal numbers just after the Planck timeA background of neutrinos and most of the heliumin the universe are relics of the primordial fireball•Helium could not have been produced until the cosmological redshift eliminated most of the high-energy photons•These photons created a deuterium bottleneck by breaking down deuterons before they could combine to form heliumGalaxies are generally located on the surfaces of roughly spherical voidsGalaxies formed from density fluctuations in the early universeAstronomers use supercomputers to simulate how the large-scale structure of the universe arose from primordial density fluctuationsModels based on dark energy and cold dark matter give good agreement with details of the large-scale structureTheories that attempt to unify the physical forcespredict that the universe may have 11 dimensions•The search for a theory that unifies gravity with the other physical forces suggests that the universe actually has 11 dimensions (ten of space and one of time), seven of which are folded on themselves so that we cannot see them•The idea of higher dimensions has motivated alternative cosmological modelsKey Words•annihilation•antimatter•antiparticle•antiproton•cold dark matter•cosmic light horizon•density fluctuation•deuterium bottleneck•electroweak force•elementary particle physics•false vacuum•flatness problem•gluon•grand unified theory


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