BB theory and preferred frames

In summary: I don't think it can ever be "translated" into a single time that applies globally across all observers, it's more like a coordinate in spacetime. Two things, if t=0 is a real singularity, that is "outside physical theories realm", an exact age can't be that well-defined since we can't know how our theory behaves at the limit when t tends to zero, as far as we ñnow time could behave weirdly there and became asymptotic or...whatever, that what a true singularity does.Second, I agree with the " refers specifically to the proper time experienced by an observer which is passing next to us now and has been at rest in the FRW coordinates since the
  • #36
my_wan said:
So I ask, how do you empirically justify that only a particular set of observers see the universe as homogeneous and isotropic?

*We* don't see the universe as homogeneous and isotropic, and we are observers. I think that counts as empirical.

Only observers who are at rest in the "comoving" frame used in the FRW models see the universe as homogeneous and isotropic. Observers who are not at rest in that frame don't. Earth is not at rest in that frame, because we see a dipole anisotropy in the CMBR. We don't have reports from astronomers in other galaxies, but based on what we can see of their motions, it appears that at least some of the nearby ones are not at rest in the "comoving" frame either (that is, their observed relative velocity to us is different from what it would need to be to cancel the dipole anisotropy we see in the CMBR). AFAIK it gets harder to tell as you go farther out.
 
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  • #37
DaleSpam said:
Then it isn't about the size of the observer, it is about the stress-energy of the observer. Obviously if the observer is so massive that it significantly distorts the metric then the metric will be significantly distorted. That tautology hardly implies any of the schizophrenia you mentioned in the OP.

You didn't understand the set up I guess, the stress-energy of the observer is idealized in such way in the FRW metric so that it doesn't distort the metric. The whole point was to explain that what is "dust" in the FRW metric refers in fact to objects of a very big size, so yes, it is about size, we haven't found so far objects of that size, up to now the biggest objects we can see are still at inhomogeneous scale (but it is expected that at some size scale we should find true homogeneity), and their distortion of spacetime doesn't significantly distort the FRW metric at all, on the contrary those objects are still considered as dust in FRW models. So it seems you might have have some confusions about the FRW cosmological model. Of course for observers below that size all kind of deviations from comoving motion should be observed (although if you take a look at the previous post about "de Vaucouleurs paradox", those deviations are only significantly observed at much smaller size scales (of a few Mpc).
And after all you already admitted that the age of the universe is purely conventional and arbitrary in a previous post, but very "reasonable" convention.
So you seem to have no problem to think two contradictory things at the same time , relativity of simultaneity and absolute simultaneity (all observers in the same space hyperslice share simultaneity of BB event no matter their spatial separation) can both coexist. Hey, if you see no problem with that who am I to drag you from your comfortable conviction.
 
  • #38
TrickyDicky said:
You didn't understand the set up I guess
I understand the setup. You deliberately make your observer so super-massive that it would distort the metric if it were not comoving and then, under the assumption that the metric is not distorted, you reach the tautological conclusion that your super-massive observer must be comoving.

What I don't understand is why you think that kind of a setup is at all important. Why do you want to go out of your way to use your super-massive observers in this scenario when in most other GR discussions observers are considered to have an insignificantly miniscule amount of mass?

TrickyDicky said:
So you seem to have no problem to think two contradictory things at the same time , relativity of simultaneity and absolute simultaneity (all observers in the same space hyperslice share simultaneity of BB event no matter their spatial separation) can both coexist.
I am not thinking two contradictory things. There is no absolute simultaneity. As we agreed above it is simply an arbitrary convention. "Arbitrary convention" explicitly implies that it is not absolute.

Only the comoving observers in the space hyperslice agree on the proper time from the BB. Not all observers are comoving, and the non-comoving ones disagree about the proper time from the BB. All of your super-massive observers are (tautologically) comoving, but clearly not all observers are super-massive.
 
  • #39
DaleSpam said:
I understand the setup.
I'm not so sure, or maybe it is the FRW model you find problem with?
My "super massive" observers don't distort the metric, they are treated as "dust" in the FRW model.Tautologically or not they are comoving. My point is that for them the there is absolute simultaneity wrt the BB event and this observers can not change their state of motion or else the homogeneity assumption is lost, so for them certainly their frame is absolute and defines an absolute state for all the others observers, all non-comoving (smaller) observers refer their state of motion to that comoving frame. The fact that there is an absolute state of motion doesn't mean absolutely all objects and observers must have that motion (be comoving) but that they refer their state of motion to that comoving frame.
DaleSpam said:
I am not thinking two contradictory things. There is no absolute simultaneity. As we agreed above it is simply an arbitrary convention. "Arbitrary convention" explicitly implies that it is not absolute.

Only the comoving observers in the space hyperslice agree on the proper time from the BB. Not all observers are comoving, and the non-comoving ones disagree about the proper time from the BB. All of your super-massive observers are (tautologically) comoving, but clearly not all observers are super-massive.
See above
 
  • #40
TrickyDicky said:
My "super massive" observers don't distort the metric, they are treated as "dust" in the FRW model. Tautologically or not they are comoving.
Understood. In your setup we are given that they do not distort the metric, and we are given that they are sufficiently super-massive that they would distort the metric if they were not comoving. Therefore the super-massive observers are comoving. What specifically do you think I am not understanding about the setup?

TrickyDicky said:
My point is that for them the there is absolute simultaneity wrt the BB event and this observers can not change their state of motion or else the homogeneity assumption is lost, so for them certainly their frame is absolute and defines an absolute state for all the others observers, all non-comoving (smaller) observers refer their state of motion to that comoving frame.
This is incorrect. While all non-comoving observers may adopt the reasonable convention of referring their state of motion to that comoving frame. Nothing physical forces them to do that. Furthermore, the super-massive observers may decide to adopt the strange convention of referring their state of motion to some non-comoving frame. Nothing physical prevents them from doing that. The simultaneity in the FRW coordinates is still relative, not absolute.
 
  • #41
TrickyDicky said:
This would require reading a few books about cosmology and GR, but you can start looking up "Weyl's postulate" in wikipedia( and possibly "cosmological principle" and "FRW metric".

I understand Weyl's postulate, and the difficulties with trying to define the physical meaning of Weyl gauges in general. I don't really buy Penrose's Weyl curvature hypothesis either or the entropy argument in general. Due to the relational character of entropy and the nonsense of talking about what's outside the Big Bang when defined as a closed system. Yet if we have an observable metric that is internally expanding from an internal perspective, such as the FRW metric, does this not imply that these internal degrees of freedom where supplied from an outside source? Yet in both the BB conception of enclosed system and relativistic symmetries this notion of degrees of freedom "from the outside" is nonsense. In what way then does the FRW metric expansion decouple itself from the spacetime metric under GR such that this metric is an observable expansion not tied to local clocks under GR?

So don't tell me that I only need to read "a few books" to grok what's happening when the debates on which those books are based can't comes to terms with even the basic physics. Fundamentally this is defined by conceptual split between classical thermodynamics and statistical mechanics. Most obviously in the "arrow of time issues" with time reversible foundations of both classical and quantum physics.

So my question stands, and handwaiving it with "read a few books" buys nothing.
 
  • #42
my_wan said:
So my question stands, and handwaiving it with "read a few books" buys nothing.

I didn't sell you anything. Your question is too broad and you need to start your own thread.
 
  • #43
DaleSpam said:
This is incorrect. While all non-comoving observers may adopt the reasonable convention of referring their state of motion to that comoving frame. Nothing physical forces them to do that. Furthermore, the super-massive observers may decide to adopt the strange convention of referring their state of motion to some non-comoving frame. Nothing physical prevents them from doing that. The simultaneity in the FRW coordinates is still relative, not absolute.
You see nothing physical in the fact that super-size observers can only have one motion state (whether you want to call it "rest frame" or "ether frame" or "CMB frame")?
 
  • #44
TrickyDicky said:
Your question is too broad and you need to start your own thread.
I agree. It feels like you are trying to hijack TrickyDicky's thread on a tangential question.
 
  • #45
TrickyDicky said:
You see nothing physical in the fact that super-size observers can only have one motion state?
No, I don't. It is a direct result of using super-massive observers and I see nothing physical about your super-massive observers.

The super massive observers are comoving, but even comoving observers are free to do physics calculations in a frame where they are not stationary if they wish. Simultaneity is not absolute. Refer back to post 4, your super-massive observers do not change that line of reasoning.
 
  • #46
PeterDonis said:
*We* don't see the universe as homogeneous and isotropic, and we are observers. I think that counts as empirical.
That is rather obvious, though my description did not depend on any model containing and homogeneity or nonhomogeneity.

PeterDonis said:
Only observers who are at rest in the "comoving" frame used in the FRW models see the universe as homogeneous and isotropic. Observers who are not at rest in that frame don't.
Ok, here's the problem once again. If we think in terms of the distribution of galaxies (CMBR aside) and their Hubble law relation to distance, then my description explain exactly why this same Hubble law would apply under all relativistic boost.

PeterDonis said:
Earth is not at rest in that frame, because we see a dipole anisotropy in the CMBR. We don't have reports from astronomers in other galaxies, but based on what we can see of their motions, it appears that at least some of the nearby ones are not at rest in the "comoving" frame either (that is, their observed relative velocity to us is different from what it would need to be to cancel the dipole anisotropy we see in the CMBR). AFAIK it gets harder to tell as you go farther out.
Now you bring in the CMBR. Here it is unique from the Hubble law of galaxies since the source is presumed to be at some equidistant boundary condition from a particular frame. In the galaxy distance/redshift case this merely corresponds to a frame in which both galaxies have the same redshift in opposite directions. Now I can't even count the number of things that can go wrong with this assumption, and the claim that a frame in which two redshifts from opposite directions exists such that the redshifts are equal is a tautology of any and all of those possibilities.

Therefore I'll ask for more detail on what you suppose this "prefered" isotropic frame means.
1) Does this mean the Universe is effectively older or younger for our frame, given our anisotropic frame with respect to CMBR?
2) Does this mean that the time since the BB is effectively older when in our frame it's measured in one direction and younger when measured in the other direction?

Now the major point from an earlier reference in this thread, but I'm only interested what Martin Rees is purported to have said here:
[PLAIN]http://www2.phys.canterbury.ac.nz/~dlw24/universe/general.html said:
But[/PLAIN] there is also a more compelling argument for the standard interpretation that I learned when I was first taught cosmology by Martin Rees in Cambridge in 1984, which I have now also taught students for 15-odd years, which goes as follows. Apart from our small local motion (which we can account for) we see an isotropic CMB.[...]

Now, here Martin Rees's justification was the "isotropic CMB". We see that it is not isotropic. We then choose a "preferred" frame in which it is isotropic and call that justification for isotropic. Yet for any two galaxies or rocks in the Universe, irrespective of any homogeneity or lack of, a "preferred" frame tautologically exist to define their redshifts as equal. Yet, due to the way relativity defines the spacetime metric, the Hubble law is generally valid for all galaxies irrespective of which frame you choose, no "preferred" frame needed. Hence defining a tautology that such a "preferred" frame exist is not evidence of squat.

This compounding of tautologies as if it was "the" evidence is aggravating. The only thing more aggravating is crackpots that remodel their own interpretation, not leaving much left where you can actually learn much about the raw empirical data without all the baggage.
 
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  • #47
DaleSpam said:
No, I don't. It is a direct result of using super-massive observers and I see nothing physical about your super-massive observers.

The super massive observers are comoving, but even comoving observers are free to do physics calculations in a frame where they are not stationary if they wish. Simultaneity is not absolute. Refer back to post 4, your super-massive observers do not change that line of reasoning.
Well, certainly, my observers are not physical, this is more like a gedanken experiment, very often observers are considered massless and nobody sees any problem with that. I think you are missing the important point, their velocity, their motion, is absolute, stationary (time invariant since it can't change his motion state) with respect to any other state of motion.
Otherwise you have to break the homogeneity assumption. That is not related to whether they are free to do calculations in any frame , the fact is that their state of motion is fixed.
Also the fact that a model is a solution of the EFE doesn't guarantee that the model is physical, and it only guarantees general covariance, not Lorentz covariance which is what here is being discussed.
 
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  • #48
The FRW solution is a spacetime that is assumed to be an approximate model of our spacetime.
I have serious reservations about that since we clearly do not see the matter distribution as homogeneous and isotropic. The assumption that it is homogeneous and isotropic on a large enough scale it is I think is sheer speculation. Matter clutters due to gravity even at large scales.
 
  • #49
I am significantly more interested in how to ask empirically answerable questions than in how such questions fit into this or that model, standard or otherwise. So the comfy chair is not for me and my issues are about how uncomfortable I am. Yet it seems to me that so long as the data is wrapped around a particular model a lot of people sit in comfy chairs with little concern about empirically askable questions. Especially those that are not explicitly formatted for their model of choice.

The notion that some idealization of a metric, such as the "stress-energy of the observer", can technically be chosen to validly justify a particular picture is a non-point to me. I can technically choose a valid frame and say that all observer must transform observations to this frame to see "the" valid picture of what is really happening to. So what. The technical validity is blindingly myopic. Before Einstein the ether played the same role the idealized metrics play in cosmology.
 
  • #50
my_wan said:
I am significantly more interested in how to ask empirically answerable questions than in how such questions fit into this or that model, standard or otherwise. So the comfy chair is not for me and my issues are about how uncomfortable I am. Yet it seems to me that so long as the data is wrapped around a particular model a lot of people sit in comfy chairs with little concern about empirically askable questions. Especially those that are not explicitly formatted for their model of choice.
Not only that but if the data does not match up there is always invisible dark energy and invisible dark matter that comes to the rescue.

That that is equivalent to insisting that a theory is right but that the discrepancies are caused by invisible pink unicorns is something that seems to go right over the heads of many.

If the CERN-Grasso experiment turns out to be correct I would not be surprised that it is posed that the theory still stands but that the discrepancies are caused by undetectable dark spacetime fluxes or something like it, with the key being that it must be undetectable.
 
  • #51
Passionflower said:
Not only that but if the data does not match up there is always invisible dark energy and invisible dark matter that comes to the rescue.

That that is equivalent to insisting that a theory is right but that the discrepancies are caused by invisible pink unicorns is something that seems to go right over the heads of many.

If the CERN-Grasso experiment turns out to be correct I would not be surprised that it is posed that the theory still stands but that the discrepancies are caused by undetectable dark spacetime fluxes or something like it, with the key being that it must be undetectable.
The dark matter/energy issue is not that big a deal to me. Unknowns are a part of science. On the face of it, it's really no worse than MOND, which pulls a form fitted to specs equation out of their... What bugs me about MOND is that if it was simply designed to specs to fit a certain empirical data curve why is it so effective with such a large variety of disparate data on so many scales? So MOND suffers from a similar non-explanation. Yet the dark matter people can't justifiable just hand wave and simply say there's no point in answering this because we already know it's wrong without looking! So the whole thing just reaks of a battle of models rather than how to actually ask real questions.

As far as the CERN-Grasso experiment, I wouldn't hold my breath. But hey, at least their asking rather than defending a model turf.
 
  • #52
Passionflower said:
Not only that but if the data does not match up there is always invisible dark energy and invisible dark matter that comes to the rescue.

That that is equivalent to insisting that a theory is right but that the discrepancies are caused by invisible pink unicorns is something that seems to go right over the heads of many.

If the CERN-Grasso experiment turns out to be correct I would not be surprised that it is posed that the theory still stands but that the discrepancies are caused by undetectable dark spacetime fluxes or something like it, with the key being that it must be undetectable.

Good points.
 
  • #53
TrickyDicky said:
Well, certainly, my observers are not physical, this is more like a gedanken experiment, very often observers are considered massless and nobody sees any problem with that.
Never massless, that would require them to follow null geodesics. They are practically always considered massive with negligible mass and negligible spatial extent. In fact, I have never seen anyone besides you speak of observers with non-negligible mass in the FRW spacetime.

TrickyDicky said:
I think you are missing the important point, their velocity, their motion, is absolute.
Agreed, except for the assertion that it is an important point.

Btw, there is no need to do anything other than say "comoving observers". The velocity and motion of standard comoving observers is also tautologically absolute. Just as with your super-massive observers in the exact FRW spacetime, but without requiring either exactness in the metric nor your unusual usage of the term "observer".

TrickyDicky said:
That is not related to whether they are free to do calculations in any frame , the fact is that their state of motion is fixed.
Their state of motion is indeed fixed as one of the givens in your setup. So what?

The point is that as you agree, they can do their physics calculations in any frame using any simultaneity convention and obtain correct predictions of the results of any physics experiments without changing the form of the equations. If simultaneity were absolute then this would not be possible, the only way to get correct physics predictions would be to do your calculations using the absolute simultaneity coordinate system. That is what is meant by absolute simultaneity.

TrickyDicky said:
Also the fact that a model is a solution of the EFE doesn't guarantee that the model is physical, and it only guarantees general covariance, not Lorentz covariance which is what here is being discusses.
What is being discussed is absolute simultaneity. General covariance guarantees an even more general form of the relativity of simultaneity than Lorentz covariance.
 
  • #54
Passionflower said:
The FRW solution is a spacetime that is assumed to be an approximate model of our spacetime.
I have serious reservations about that since we clearly do not see the matter distribution as homogeneous and isotropic. The assumption that it is homogeneous and isotropic on a large enough scale it is I think is sheer speculation. Matter clutters due to gravity even at large scales.

I see what you mean here and it is in part what suggested me the scenario I present for the hypothetical scale in which matter distribution is perfectly homogeneous as the LCDM model based in the FRW solution expects. But there's where some problems arise,objects of that scale size (hyperclusters to name them some way) must have a fixed or stationary state of motion(perfect comoving frame of the FRW model) if the homogeneity of the model is to be taken seriously, so they can act as a stationary reference for all other moving objects. Certainly so fa rwe haven't observed that kind of homogeneity, the clusters we observe are still colliding (i.e. Bullet cluster), but according to the LCDM model we should be very close to observing the scale at which true homogeneity appears. How is the problem above mentioned avoided?
 
  • #55
DaleSpam said:
Never massless, that would require them to follow null geodesics. They are practically always considered massive with negligible mass and negligible spatial extent. In fact, I have never seen anyone besides you speak of observers with non-negligible mass in the FRW spacetime.
Actually that is what I meant, sorry about my clumsy wording, I was referring to negligible mass and extent.
DaleSpam said:
Agreed, except for the assertion that it is an important point.
Well, importance is something subjective, I can't expect you to find important the same things I do.
DaleSpam said:
Btw, there is no need to do anything other than say "comoving observers". The velocity and motion of standard comoving observers is also tautologically absolute. Just as with your super-massive observers in the exact FRW spacetime, but without requiring either exactness in the metric nor your unusual usage of the term "observer".
I've been trying to stress at all times the size, not the mass, and there is a reason for that , I was trying to be graphic in this sense because I wanted to relate my set up with the realcosmological search of the homogeneity scale.
Otherwise you are right that I could have said just comoving observers or better comoving objects, the diference is in the homogeneous or inhomogeneous context. Objects comoving that have the size at which homogeneity is found can only have that state of motion, that is not the case for the other smaller comoving objects.
DaleSpam said:
Their state of motion is indeed fixed as one of the givens in your setup. So what?
So what? I take that question as funny understatement.
DaleSpam said:
The point is that as you agree, they can do their physics calculations in any frame using any simultaneity convention and obtain correct predictions of the results of any physics experiments without changing the form of the equations. If simultaneity were absolute then this would not be possible, the only way to get correct physics predictions would be to do your calculations using the absolute simultaneity coordinate system. That is what is meant by absolute simultaneity.
I didn't agree that they should obtain "correct" results :wink:
DaleSpam said:
What is being discussed is absolute simultaneity. General covariance guarantees an even more general form of the relativity of simultaneity than Lorentz covariance.
This is just not correct, I'll find you a reference.
 
  • #56
The first and the fourth papers in this site are relevant.

http://www.tc.umn.edu/~janss011/
 
  • #57
TrickyDicky said:
I've been trying to stress at all times the size, not the mass,
If you are talking about super-large but negligible-mass then there is no reason that they need to be comoving. The size is irrelevant, only the mass (or rather stress-energy). Large, negligible mass observers may move without disrupting the isotropy and homogeneity of the FRW metric.

TrickyDicky said:
I didn't agree that they should obtain "correct" results :wink:
As long as the laws of physics can be formulated in a covariant manner they will.
 
  • #58
DaleSpam said:
If you are talking about super-large but negligible-mass then there is no reason that they need to be comoving. The size is irrelevant, only the mass (or rather stress-energy). Large, negligible mass observers may move without disrupting the isotropy and homogeneity of the FRW metric.
No, I'm not considering their mass negligible, only saying that size was important because of the homogeneity issue, when I previously spoke about negligible mass I was clarifying my previous comment on people using unphysical "massless" observers that was (rightly) corrected by you.

DaleSpam said:
As long as the laws of physics can be formulated in a covariant manner they will.
Nope, you are ignoring my last post and the last comment in the previous post, you are mixing Lorentz covariance with general covariance, the former is not guaranteed by being a solution of the EFE. To be more precise Lorentz covariance is only guaranteed by general covariance at infinitesimal size points. See post #10 in this https://www.physicsforums.com/showthread.php?p=3679704#post3679704
 
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  • #59
TrickyDicky said:
No, I'm not considering their mass negligible, only saying that size was important because of the homogeneity issue
The size is not important, only the mass (stress-energy). Consider, for example, an observer consisting of a black hole containing 90% of the mass of the universe. The size is negligible, but due to the immense mass the homogeneity and isotropy of the FRW spacetime is clearly violated. Consider, for a second example, an observer of immense hyper-cluster size of mass 1 mg. Such an observer would not distort the FRW spacetime at all, despite being hyper-cluster size. The size is not important, only the stress-energy.

TrickyDicky said:
you are mixing Lorentz covariance with general covariance, the former is not guaranteed by being a solution of the EFE. To be more precise Lorentz covariance is only guaranteed by general covariance at infinitesimal size points. See post #10 in this https://www.physicsforums.com/showthread.php?p=3679704#post3679704
I agree, but again, that is not what we have been discussing. We are discussing absolute and relative simultaneity, which is a feature of Lorentz covariance. Although you cannot do a global Lorentz transform* in a curved spacetime you can do essentially arbitrary changes in simultaneity in general diffeomorphisms. Thus the relativity of simultaneity is also a feature of general covariance. So proving general covariance is sufficient to prove relativity of simultaneity.

*Actually, you can do a global Lorentz transform on any set of coordinates where all four coordinates range from -∞ to ∞. However, unless the spacetime is flat the components of the metric will change.
 
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  • #60
DaleSpam said:
The size is not important, only the mass (stress-energy). Consider, for example, an observer consisting of a black hole containing 90% of the mass of the universe. The size is negligible, but due to the immense mass the homogeneity and isotropy of the FRW spacetime is clearly violated. Consider, for a second example, an observer of immense hyper-cluster size of mass 1 mg. Such an observer would not distort the FRW spacetime at all, despite being hyper-cluster size. The size is not important, only the stress-energy.
I keep saying this is not about distorting or violating the FRW model but about sticking to it.
Size (or scale) is strictly a deman of reality, at the scales we observe there is no homogeneity, but the current mainstream model expects it at bigger scales, that is why size is important in the FRW model set up.
OTOH, if you really think super massive BH's clearly violate the FRW spacetime you are not in line with mainstream cosmology, unless you believe BHs don't exist since they haven't been observed. In which case you are also not mainstream anyway.

DaleSpam said:
Sure, but again, that is not what we have been discussing. We are discussing absolute and relative simultaneity, which is only one feature of Lorentz covariance. Although you cannot do a global Lorentz transform in a curved spacetime you can do essentially arbitrary changes in simultaneity in general diffeomorphisms. Thus the relativity of simultaneity is also a feature of general covariance and proving general covariance is sufficient to prove relativity of simultaneity.
Simultaneity of relativity is a feature of SR, and is realized in GR locally (at infinitesimal points), a cluster is not an infinitesimal point.
Besides the fact that there is absolute simultaneity for a class of observers doesn't mean that there isn't relativity of simultaneity for the rest of observers.
 
  • #61
TrickyDicky said:
I keep saying this is not about distorting or violating the FRW model but about sticking to it.
Right, and as long as you do not distort or violate FRW then you are sticking to it.

TrickyDicky said:
Size (or scale) is strictly a deman of reality, at the scales we observe there is no homogeneity, but the current mainstream model expects it at bigger scales, that is why size is important in the FRW model set up.
Scale is important in the assumption of homogeneity, but size is irrelevant for specifying a class of observers.

Remember, your goal with that stipulation was merely to obtain a class of observers where it was logically necessary that they be comoving. If you have observers that are super-large but of negligible mass then they need not be comoving, and their motion will not distort FRW.

TrickyDicky said:
Simultaneity of relativity is a feature of SR
It is not exclusive to SR, as I have already described.

TrickyDicky, we are going in circles. In post 5 you agreed with my post 4. Therefore, the big bang does not imply a preferred frame nor absolute simultaneity. QED.

In the intervening posts you have introduced a lot of unnecessary concepts. With all of these irrelevancies bouncing around in your mind I am not surprised that you are confused, but I don't think that there is anything I can do about it. All I can say is that the schizophrenia you worry about is in your head, not in GR.
 
  • #62
DaleSpam said:
Right, and as long as you do not distort or violate FRW then you are sticking to it.

Scale is important in the assumption of homogeneity, but size is irrelevant for specifying a class of observers.

Remember, your goal with that stipulation was merely to obtain a class of observers where it was logically necessary that they be comoving. If you have observers that are super-large but of negligible mass then they need not be comoving, and their motion will not distort FRW.

It is not exclusive to SR, as I have already described.

TrickyDicky, we are going in circles. In post 5 you agreed with my post 4. Therefore, the big bang does not imply a preferred frame nor absolute simultaneity. QED.

In the intervening posts you have introduced a lot of unnecessary concepts. With all of these irrelevancies bouncing around in your mind I am not surprised that you are confused, but I don't think that there is anything I can do about it. All I can say is that the schizophrenia you worry about is in your head, not in GR.

Hilarious reply, (I agreed in post 4 so QED) if a bit pathetic and completely devoid of physics.

Thanks. Hopefully peter donis or someone else could look into this.
 
  • #63
TrickyDicky said:
I see what you mean here and it is in part what suggested me the scenario I present for the hypothetical scale in which matter distribution is perfectly homogeneous as the LCDM model based in the FRW solution expects. But there's where some problems arise,objects of that scale size (hyperclusters to name them some way) must have a fixed or stationary state of motion(perfect comoving frame of the FRW model) if the homogeneity of the model is to be taken seriously, so they can act as a stationary reference for all other moving objects. Certainly so fa rwe haven't observed that kind of homogeneity, the clusters we observe are still colliding (i.e. Bullet cluster), but according to the LCDM model we should be very close to observing the scale at which true homogeneity appears. How is the problem above mentioned avoided?
TrickyDicky; Most of the GR jargon in this thread is over my head, but am I right in supposing the above distills your key issue - FLRW/BB model is somehow wrong because homogeneity should be evident at the supercluster scale indicated, but observationally isn't? So is this suggesting say a fractal cosmology model as nearer the truth, or something else (or I've misunderstood the issue)?
 
  • #64
Q-reeus said:
TrickyDicky; Most of the GR jargon in this thread is over my head, but am I right in supposing the above distills your key issue - FLRW/BB model is somehow wrong because homogeneity should be evident at the supercluster scale indicated, but observationally isn't? So is this suggesting say a fractal cosmology model as nearer the truth, or something else (or I've misunderstood the issue)?
Not exactly, I'm just trying to expose a problem that might arise with a key prediction of FRW/BB model, not judging it in terms of wrong vs. correct model.
The homogeneity at large scales is hard to discern with the observational data at this moment with some groups claiming it has already been reached and other groups (those who suggest a fractal cosmology model) saying it hasn't indeed been observed based in a different statistical treatment of redshift data and slightly different definition of the cosmological principle (see for instance http://arxiv.org/abs/1012.5624).
I see problems with the fractal cosmology, the main one that it doesn't really have a solid mathematical and physical model that is consistent with what we already know (GR).
I'm basically following strictly FRW/BB model (not interested right now in debating whether empirically we have observationally reached the homogeneity scale or not or if in my opinion such transition occurs at some point) and showing how this key prediction produces some problem related to the existence of an absolute frame of motion for objects of the size at which the homogeneity is reached and bigger, they define an stationary frame,they are perfect comoving objects (invariant in time since they can't change their motion or else homogeneity is not achieved) all the smaller objects can refer their motion to.
It's just this, it might be solved easily because maybe I'm missing something very obvious, but so far no one has come up with it.
 
  • #65
TrickyDicky said:
I'm basically following strictly FRW/BB model...and showing how this key prediction produces some problem related to the existence of an absolute frame of motion for objects of the size at which the homogeneity is reached and bigger, they define an stationary frame,they are perfect comoving objects (invariant in time since they can't change their motion or else homogeneity is not achieved) all the smaller objects can refer their motion to.
As I understand it in a truly homogeneous BB universe, every point can be considered 'the centre', and uniform Hubble expansion about it follows. But that being true for any location, neglecting 'real universe' inhomogeneities of density and peculiar velocities, I'm not getting this bit about absolute motion/rest beyond a certain scale. Assuming this is not an averaging issue of some sort, is there a specific scenario of what it would mean to be otherwise? Sorry for dumb question - this absolute rest thing is throwing me.
 
  • #66
Q-reeus said:
As I understand it in a truly homogeneous BB universe, every point can be considered 'the centre', and uniform Hubble expansion about it follows. But that being true for any location, neglecting 'real universe' inhomogeneities of density and peculiar velocities, I'm not getting this bit about absolute motion/rest beyond a certain scale. Assuming this is not an averaging issue of some sort, is there a specific scenario of what it would mean to be otherwise? Sorry for dumb question - this absolute rest thing is throwing me.
Ok, the thing is FRW model demands spatial homogeneity as one of its main assumptions (along with isotropy), to make more precise those assumptions a set of fundamental observers are introduced to define better mathematically how that homogeneity must be understood , that is to make clear it must be only spatial and therefore define a synchronous coordinate time. These observers have a state of motion (comoving frame) that allows them to define the flow of the cosmological fluid (the Hubble flow) as being at rest wrt them.
Obviously the FRW model is an idealized model, and we don't observe homogeneity at the scale size of the solar system or galaxies. When this model was proposed in the 30's galaxies as differentiated entities had just been confirmed by Hubble. At the beginning it was thought that the scale of homogeneity would be at the galactic group, so it came as a surprised when progress in technology allowed us to make cosmological maps of certain size in the 70s/80s that ever bigger clusters and voids without appearance of homogeneity were found. Nevertheless the model needs that homogeneity to be reached at some point.
To give an example if we had found it at the clusters level that would have meant these clusters should be following perfect worldlines orthogonal to the spatial hypersurfaces, so no collision like the Bullet cluster would be possible. It would also mean clusters and any bigger object, couldn't change their state of motion in time, so they would define a sort of stationary absolute frame that all the rest of smaller objects with the capacity of changing state of motion could use as reference.
Hope this helps some, I'm not very good at explaining.
 
  • #67
TrickyDicky said:
Obviously the FRW model is an idealized model, and we don't observe homogeneity at the scale size of the solar system or galaxies. When this model was proposed in the 30's galaxies as differentiated entities had just been confirmed by Hubble. At the beginning it was thought that the scale of homogeneity would be at the galactic group, so it came as a surprised when progress in technology allowed us to make cosmological maps of certain size in the 70s/80s that ever bigger clusters and voids without appearance of homogeneity were found. Nevertheless the model needs that homogeneity to be reached at some point.

One thing to point out here: it is possible that, even if the universe today is *not* homogeneous enough to make an FRW model a useful approximation, it may still have been in the past. For example, the isotropy of the CMBR indicates that at the time of "last scattering", the universe was homogeneous to about one part in 100,000. So it could still be that an FRW model would be a good approximation for some portion of the universe's history, even if it isn't for the current universe. A full model could then "patch" an FRW model for the portion of the universe's history where it was a good approximation, onto something else like a fractal model for later times when the size of structures had become large enough to make homogeneity no longer a good approximation even on large scales.

TrickyDicky said:
To give an example if we had found it at the clusters level that would have meant these clusters should be following perfect worldlines orthogonal to the spatial hypersurfaces, so no collision like the Bullet cluster would be possible.

Another thing to point out: even if homogeneity is a good approximation on the largest scales, that does not mean that any actual objects we observe have to be comoving. All that is required is that the *average* motion of the actual objects we observe is comoving. The FRW model treats the matter in the universe as a fluid, with the objects we actually observe viewed as "particles" of the fluid. The average motion of a fluid does not have to match up exactly with the individual motion of any of its particles.
 
  • #68
PeterDonis said:
even if homogeneity is a good approximation on the largest scales, that does not mean that any actual objects we observe have to be comoving. All that is required is that the *average* motion of the actual objects we observe is comoving. The FRW model treats the matter in the universe as a fluid, with the objects we actually observe viewed as "particles" of the fluid. The average motion of a fluid does not have to match up exactly with the individual motion of any of its particles.
The problem with this is that an inhomogeneity to homogeneity transition scale cannot be reached as an average, it is either there (spatially homogeneous model) or not there (spatially inhomogeneous model), and if it's there, like the FRW model demands, the scale at which the transition occurs is not an average, there will be objects above that scale size which will be obliged to have a certain motion state without possibility of changing it, they will be following the worldlines exactly orthogonal to spacelike hypersurfaces and therefore they'll define an apparently absolute frame for all objects under that size.

Of course there is a backdrop problem in all this, GR only deals with "test particles" when talking about motion, so I'm not sure this can even be treated properly within GR since my comoving objects are huge, i.e. their extent and stress-energy can't be neglected the way is demanded in GR.
 
  • #69
TrickyDicky said:
The problem with this is that an inhomogeneity to homogeneity transition scale cannot be reached as an average, it is either there (spatially homogeneous model) or not there (spatially inhomogeneous model), and if it's there, like the FRW model demands, the scale at which the transition occurs is not an average, there will be objects above that scale size which will be obliged to have a certain motion state without possibility of changing it, they will be following the worldlines exactly orthogonal to spacelike hypersurfaces and therefore they'll define an apparently absolute frame for all objects under that size.

This is not how I understand the FRW model; as I said, it models the matter in the universe as a fluid, and all assertions about homogeneity (to some scale of approximation), isotropy, "comoving" worldlines, etc., refer to the fluid, not to any individual pieces of matter that compose it. A fluid can have an average property, such as density, that is constant to within some scale of approximation, and can have "average" worldlines assigned to it, without any actual piece of matter in the fluid having to have the average density or move along the average worldline.

It is true that the matter in the universe is unlike that in an ordinary fluid because of the fractal-like structure we now know it to have. Some cosmologists appear to be claiming that this is enough to invalidate FRW-type models (at least at the current epoch, though not necessarily in past epochs--see my earlier post), but I don't think that claim requires one to assert that FRW models require that the largest bound systems we see (superclusters) must be comoving (so that evidence that they're not invalidates the FRW model). The way I would expect an inhomogeneous structure to affect the dynamics is through the equation of state: a "lumpy" fluid where the particles tend to clump together will have a different equation of state (relationship of pressure to density) than an ideal gas-type fluid, which is basically what the FRW models assume.
 
  • #70
PeterDonis said:
This is not how I understand the FRW model; as I said, it models the matter in the universe as a fluid, and all assertions about homogeneity (to some scale of approximation), isotropy, "comoving" worldlines, etc., refer to the fluid, not to any individual pieces of matter that compose it. A fluid can have an average property, such as density, that is constant to within some scale of approximation, and can have "average" worldlines assigned to it, without any actual piece of matter in the fluid having to have the average density or move along the average worldline.
Yes, I agree with this, and it is the way the model should be understood for the universe at scales below the homogeneity threshold size, without the need for any piece of matter in the fluid having to have the average density or move along the average worldline as you say. But I'm not sure if you agree that in the LCDM model there is a certain threshold of size at which homogeneity is no longer an approximation, if one really believes the universe has an average density. Even if you are more inclined to the fractal model (I don't know, I gather it from the way you refer to it) you should understand what is the case in the FRW model, that by the way is completely incompatible with the fractal model (in which to begin with there is no average density at all).

PeterDonis said:
It is true that the matter in the universe is unlike that in an ordinary fluid because of the fractal-like structure we now know it to have. Some cosmologists appear to be claiming that this is enough to invalidate FRW-type models (at least at the current epoch, though not necessarily in past epochs--see my earlier post), but I don't think that claim requires one to assert that FRW models require that the largest bound systems we see (superclusters) must be comoving (so that evidence that they're not invalidates the FRW model).
But I'm not claiming that, the FRW model is compatible with a quasifractal-like matter distribution for small and intermediate size scales, but it demands that eventually the inhomogeneities must smooth out if a true average density is to be found. My claim only affects objects of enough size so that homogeneity holds without approximation, those objects haven't been observed yet , but according to the FRW model they must exist -again the alternative is 0 average density, if the homogeneity threshold keeps getting bigger (in the limit at infinity).
At this moment superclusters not exactly comoving invalidate nothing since we know at that scale homogeneity hasn't been reached yet, I was just talking hypothetically if the transition to homogeneity had alredy been reached at that scale.
 

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