Ranku said:
... In other words, when we say the universe is accelerating do we really mean that it is decelerating less than before?
Ich answered perfectly. I will just repeat for emphasis. No, we do not mean what you said. When we say the universe is accelerating, we mean that the expansion is accelerating (an increase in the time rate of increase in the scalefactor)
Our handle on the size of the universe is the scalefactor a(t). What plugs into the Friedman metric and makes distances expand.
The scalefactor is the key thing in the Friedman model. The two Friedman equations govern the evolution of the scalefactor.
(Look up Friedman equations on Wiki)
Do not worry about the Hubble rate. It is just a conventional symbol for the ratio a'/a.
It relates in a convenient way to observations, and is extremely useful, but is not fundamental.
The real thing you must think about is a(t). It is the backbone and the guts of the model.
When people say "the universe is expanding" that means nothing else than that
a'(t) > 0
When people say "the expansion is accelerating" that means nothing else than
a"(t) > 0.
There is no reason to be surprised that H(t) is decreasing. H(t) is merely something defined to be equal a'(t)/a(t) and it is quite normal for a function which is increasing at an increasing rate to have that particular ratio be decreasing. Here is an example:
Let f(t) = t
3 on the positive real axis.
Then f'(t) = 3t
2 which is positive so f is increasing
and f"(t) = 6t which is positive so the increase is accelerating.
But what would be analogous to H, namely f'(t)/f(t) = 3t
2/t
3 = 3/t,
is obviously decreasing.
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Ranku, thanks for posting this question on the forum. It is constructive. Many people do not understand what "accelerating expansion" means and get confused in exactly the way you did. If there is something about this that you now do not understand, please ask more questions. Keep asking until it is clear.
