Accelerating Universe: Experiments, Acceptance & Implications

In summary: WMAP data with a model with and without DE. In summary, a 1998 study found that supernovae at a redshift of 1 were fainter than expected, and this could mean that the universe is expanding faster than previously thought. If this is the case, then it may be due to the presence of Dark Energy. There is still some debate within the scientific community about this discovery, but it does seem to be generally accepted.
  • #1
Chen
977
1
I've heard that in the late '90s two independent groups discovered experimentally that the expansion of the universe is in fact accelerating, which might imply a non-vanishing cosmological constant in Einstein's relativity.

So first of all, can anyone provide some more information about these experiements? Which groups made the discovery?

And second, is this discovery commonly accepted within the scientific community? Do theoretical physicists assume a priori that the universe is accelerating outwards, and that their theory needs to explain this?

Thanks,
Chen
 
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  • #2
In 1998 Saul Perlmutter, team leader of the Supernova Cosmology Project at Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, found distant super-novae type Ia at around red shift z ~ 1 to be fainter than expected.

Therefore, these SN may well be further away than previously expected in the Friedmann cosmological model. If this is the case then that would mean the universe has not decelerated as in that model and may well have accelerated in its expansion since that light was first emitted.

Such behaviour can be explained by the presence of negative pressure. (Positive pressure, has a positive mass equivalent that causes the universe, counter-intuitively, to increase its deceleration). This is delivered by something called Dark Energy that has an equation of state [itex] p = \omega \rho[/itex] where [itex]\omega[/itex] was negative. Fitting this parameter to the SN Ia's apparent magnitudes indicates that [itex]\omega \sim -1[/itex] and indeed the universe was shown to accelerate rather than decelerate.

The universe appears to be flat, (see the recent threads on WMAP), which in the Friedmann model requires a cosmological density equal to the critical density [itex]\Omega = 1[/itex] (or very nearly so), yet the observed density of all forms of matter is only about a third of this, so the density of this Dark Energy makes up the difference. This can be considered a verification of its existence.

The latest WMAP3 release indicates that the universe consists of, (by mass)
SpaceTiger said:
~76% dark energy
~22.5% dark matter
~1.5% ordinary matter
So this DE is said to make up over 3/4 the density of the universe!

As we have not identified either DE or DM in the laboratory this is somewhat an unsatisfactory state of affairs, nevertheless it does explain why the universe could be accelerating in its expansion.

The presence of DE would also open out the short time scale of the early, high z, universe in the Friedmann models and explain how large scale structure had time to develop, together with the earliest stars and galaxies. (BTW the DM is also necessary to assist in the collapse of those structures.)

Garth
 
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  • #3
In previous reports, the ordinary matter fraction was about 4.5%, with an error estimate less than 0.5%. The change to 1.5% seems pretty drastic! An independent check is supposed to include light element (H1, H2, He4, etc.) ratios. Is 1.5% consistent with these data?
 
  • #4
mathman said:
In previous reports, the ordinary matter fraction was about 4.5%, with an error estimate less than 0.5%. The change to 1.5% seems pretty drastic! An independent check is supposed to include light element (H1, H2, He4, etc.) ratios. Is 1.5% consistent with these data?

It was a mis-type. The number is still around 4%. See the WMAP thread for details.
 
  • #5
Juan Casado said:
Another explanation for SNe Ia faintness

This explosions would seem farther away than they really are (were) because of a small negative curvature of space. In a slightly hyperbolic Universe, the wave front of light is spreading out faster than in a flat one (the light cone resembling a horn) so that luminosity distances would appear longer than they are.
In such scenario no dark energy would be needed.
Juan as selfAdjoint said in the dark matter, dark energy & gravity thread you have posted this text several times, however its rightful place is here, so that is where I shall answer it!

You are correct, hyperbolic space will cause initially parallel light rays to diverge and objects will appear smaller, further away and fainter than in flat space, similar to a concave lens effect.

This effect is convoluted with the expansion rate of the universe, because an accelerating universe will also result in objects that will actually be further away than at the same red shift z in a non-accelerating or decelerating universe.

There is always a degeneracy in the interpretation of cosmological effects, however in this case both the curvature and expansion effects have already been taken into account in the models that then are compared to the observations of these distant Type Ia supernovae.

The standard model fits several parameters to the data, not only that of these standard candles but also the WMAP data, quasar lensing data and other cosmological constraints.

That mainstream fit does require DE.

However as an example of your suggestion see Figure 2 in the primary paper on the subject of high red-shift Type Ia supernovae: Perlmuter et al's paper:Measurements of Omega and Lambda from 42 High-Redshift Supernovae (page 23)
The middle solid curve is for ([itex]\Omega_M[/itex],[itex]\Omega_{\Lambda}[/itex]) = (0,0). Note that this plot is practically identical to the magnitude residual plot for the best-fit unconstrained cosmology of Fit C, with([itex]\Omega_M[/itex],[itex]\Omega_{\Lambda}[/itex]) = (0.73,1.32).

The ([itex]\Omega_M[/itex],[itex]\Omega_{\Lambda}[/itex]) = (0,0) plot being the empty, [URL=[PLAIN]http://arxiv.org/abs/astro-ph/0306448[/URL] model universe which has hyperbolic space and no DE. (It also doesn't require undiscovered non-baryonic DM either, but that is another story!)

As a caveat I must also add that this ([itex]\Omega_M[/itex],[itex]\Omega_{\Lambda}[/itex]) = (0,0) plot is not such a good fit at higher red-shifts where the supernovae begin to become brighter than expected.

Notice also that this cosmic acceleration interpretation depends on the assumption that Type Ia supernovae are standard candles. They are standard candles in our own galaxy, which is why this type of supernova is used as such, but that is no guarantee that they remain of the same intrinsic luminosity over cosmological time, especially if physical constants actually vary over such time scales.

There may be several alternative explanations for these observations.

Garth
 
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  • #6
Juan, the problem I see with the hyperbolic curvature conjecture is it predicts a smoothly accelerating universe. As Garth noted, that is not consistent with observations [e.g., Perlmutter].
 
  • #7
Garth,
Thanks for your wise reply.
The empty DeSitter model is not a bad fit to Perlmutter data you quoted indeed. But, obviously, it is unphysical in the framework of Friedman equations.
Consider however this scenario:
In an infinite and homogeneous Universe, the gravity force on each single galaxy should be practically canceled out (I do not consider here local, but overall effects) as the vectorial sum of the mass distribution all around up to an infinite distance, so that gravity should not decelerate the expansion due to symetry reasons. If gravity is not controlling the cosmic expansion, no matter which is the density at every moment. Under such simple assumption, a exponentialy growing Universe with a really constant H, i.e. a DeSitter model, could be a feasible way of describing such expansion in a nearly flat, slightly hyperbolic Universe.
 
  • #8
Juan Casado said:
Consider however this scenario:
In an infinite and homogeneous Universe, the gravity force on each single galaxy should be practically canceled out (I do not consider here local, but overall effects) as the vectorial sum of the mass distribution all around up to an infinite distance, so that gravity should not decelerate the expansion due to symetry reasons. If gravity is not controlling the cosmic expansion, no matter which is the density at every moment. Under such simple assumption, a exponentialy growing Universe with a really constant H, i.e. a DeSitter model, could be a feasible way of describing such expansion in a nearly flat, slightly hyperbolic Universe.
With space-time curvature, i.e. GR, the universe does not have to be infinite, just unbounded.

This is the situation for each of the Friedmann models, gravity does affect the evolution of the universe, the universe is symmetric in space but not in time. We observe this gravity effect as red-shift, which is interpreted under the GR paradigm as cosmic expansion.

Garth
 
  • #9
Yes, but assume universe is infinite, as it could be in fact...even within GR. Could my earlier reasoning be ruled out?

Furthermore, if gravity is not decelerating the expansion, the GR paradigm would be useless regarding this issue (even if GR is correct wherever aplicable).

By the way, the Hot Big Bang model, in its modern form, interprets redshift as a measure of the change of the universe scale factor since the emission of the observed light, rather than as an effect of gravity.
 
  • #10
Juan Casado said:
Yes, but assume universe is infinite, as it could be in fact...even within GR. Could my earlier reasoning be ruled out?
That hyperbolic space makes objects look further away than Euclidean space? Sure.
Furthermore, if gravity is not decelerating the expansion, the GR paradigm would be useless regarding this issue (even if GR is correct wherever aplicable).
Not, as we have said, if DE had negative pressure.
By the way, the Hot Big Bang model, in its modern form, interprets redshift as a measure of the change of the universe scale factor since the emission of the observed light, rather than as an effect of gravity.
That scale factor is an effect of gravity, or to be precise, an effect of the curvature of 4D space-time in an homogeneous and isotropic universe.

Garth
 
  • #11
I think the problem is you can't or you don´t want to imagine the possibilities that there is no DE or that gravity could not decelerate the Universal expansion...
But DE is not granted. For instance, up to a few years ago DE was not invented in order to explain the accelerating expansion, and Big Bang theory was confortable without DE.
Furthermore, an empty DeSitter universe would indeed expand (i.e. increase the scale factor) even without any effect of gravity (since there is no mass on it). So, there are examples in which you can get out of the standard paradigm...Please try it.
Thanks for your comments.

Juan
 
  • #12
Juan Casado said:
I think the problem is you can't or you don´t want to imagine the possibilities that there is no DE or that gravity could not decelerate the Universal expansion...
You obviously haven't seen my own work...http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Self_creation_cosmology
A significant feature of SCC is that it is as consistent with cosmological constraints as the standard paradigm in the distant supernovae data, the Cosmic Microwave Background anisotropies and primordial nucleo-synthesis. Unlike the standard model, however, it does not require the addition of the undiscovered physics of Inflation, dark non-baryonic matter, or unknown dark energy
The standard model does treat the possibility of hyperbolic space and the empty universe properly, it's just that it finds (WMAP) the universe is flat or nearly flat (possibly 'just' spherical).

Garth
 
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  • #13
I don't see how the universe can be infinite and expand. How can infinite expand? If the universe is finite in time it must be finite in space. Infinite cannot expand out of a singularity which was finite to begin with.
 
  • #14
Flatland said:
I don't see how the universe can be infinite and expand. How can infinite expand? If the universe is finite in time it must be finite in space. Infinite cannot expand out of a singularity which was finite to begin with.
Every point within the universe moves away from every other point. That is the expansion.

Every observer sees themselves as the centre of the expansion.

The universe will only be non-infinite if it is spherical, otherwise, if it is homogeneous and isotropic, it will be infinite.

In which case the infinite expands - after all [itex]\infty \times x = \infty[/itex]

Garth
 
  • #15
Early in the Universe's development, there was actually a period of deceleration caused by gravitational 'braking' between relatively near galaxies (relatively near because the Universe hadn't enough time to sufficiently grow to make intergalactic gravitational attraction negligible). Because the Universe was so small back then, Omega-Matter was actually greater then Omega-Lambda, but at present Omega-Lamda is greater, whence the Universe's acceleration.
 
  • #16
One question, if the Universe is accelerating, thus expanding faster and faster, does that imply time is moving faster?
 

1. What is the Accelerating Universe theory?

The Accelerating Universe theory is the idea that the expansion of the universe is accelerating, meaning that the rate at which galaxies are moving away from each other is increasing over time. This theory was first proposed in the late 1990s based on observations of distant supernovae.

2. How do scientists study the Accelerating Universe?

Scientists study the Accelerating Universe through various experiments, such as measuring the brightness and redshift of supernovae, mapping the distribution of galaxies, and observing the cosmic microwave background radiation. These experiments provide evidence for the increasing expansion of the universe and help to refine our understanding of this phenomenon.

3. What is the significance of the Accelerating Universe theory?

The Accelerating Universe theory has significant implications for our understanding of the universe and its future. It suggests that the expansion of the universe will continue to accelerate, eventually leading to a "Big Freeze" scenario where all matter becomes too far apart to interact with each other. This theory also challenges our current understanding of gravity and has led to the development of new theories, such as dark energy, to explain the accelerating expansion.

4. How widely accepted is the Accelerating Universe theory?

The Accelerating Universe theory is widely accepted among the scientific community, as it is supported by a large body of evidence from various experiments and observations. However, there is still ongoing research and debate about the exact mechanisms behind the accelerating expansion and the role of dark energy in this process.

5. What are the potential implications of the Accelerating Universe theory?

The Accelerating Universe theory has potential implications for the future of our universe and our understanding of fundamental physics. If the theory is correct, it suggests that the universe will continue to expand and eventually reach a state of maximum entropy, where all energy is evenly distributed and no work can be done. It also challenges our current understanding of gravity and could potentially lead to new discoveries and advancements in this field.

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