Cerenkov
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I've been thinking some more about the Hawking - Penrose Singularity theorem and was wondering if you could help me gain a better understanding of the assumptions they made when they wrote it, in 1970.
In Hawking's book, A Brief History of Time (chapter 3, page 25) he writes....
In 1965 I read about Penrose’s theorem that any body undergoing gravitational collapse must eventually form a singularity. I soon realized that if one reversed the direction of time in Penrose’s theorem, so that the collapse became an expansion, the conditions of his theorem would still hold, provided the universe were roughly like a Friedmann model on large scales at the present time. Penrose’s theorem had shown that any collapsing star must end in a singularity; the time-reversed argument showed that any Friedmann-like expanding universe must have begun with a singularity.
For technical reasons, Penrose’s theorem required that the universe be infinite in space. So I could in fact, use it to prove that there should be a singularity only if the universe was expanding fast enough to avoid collapsing again (since only those Friedmann models were infinite in space).
During the next few years I developed new mathematical techniques to remove this and other technical
conditions from the theorems that proved that singularities must occur. The final result was a joint paper by
Penrose and myself in 1970, which at last proved that there must have been a big bang singularity provided
only that general relativity is correct and the universe contains as much matter as we observe.
Reading this, here are the assumptions that I think they made.
1. That the universe is roughly like a Friedmann model on large scales at the present time.
2. That the universe is infinitely large.
3. That the universe was expanding fast enough to avoid re-collapse.
4. That general relativity is correct.
5. That the universe contains as much matter as we observe.
So, for now I have two questions. Is my list correct regarding what Hawking says was assumed by them? Have any findings made since 1970 rendered the above assumptions false?
Thank you in advance for help.
Cerenkov.
In Hawking's book, A Brief History of Time (chapter 3, page 25) he writes....
In 1965 I read about Penrose’s theorem that any body undergoing gravitational collapse must eventually form a singularity. I soon realized that if one reversed the direction of time in Penrose’s theorem, so that the collapse became an expansion, the conditions of his theorem would still hold, provided the universe were roughly like a Friedmann model on large scales at the present time. Penrose’s theorem had shown that any collapsing star must end in a singularity; the time-reversed argument showed that any Friedmann-like expanding universe must have begun with a singularity.
For technical reasons, Penrose’s theorem required that the universe be infinite in space. So I could in fact, use it to prove that there should be a singularity only if the universe was expanding fast enough to avoid collapsing again (since only those Friedmann models were infinite in space).
During the next few years I developed new mathematical techniques to remove this and other technical
conditions from the theorems that proved that singularities must occur. The final result was a joint paper by
Penrose and myself in 1970, which at last proved that there must have been a big bang singularity provided
only that general relativity is correct and the universe contains as much matter as we observe.
Reading this, here are the assumptions that I think they made.
1. That the universe is roughly like a Friedmann model on large scales at the present time.
2. That the universe is infinitely large.
3. That the universe was expanding fast enough to avoid re-collapse.
4. That general relativity is correct.
5. That the universe contains as much matter as we observe.
So, for now I have two questions. Is my list correct regarding what Hawking says was assumed by them? Have any findings made since 1970 rendered the above assumptions false?
Thank you in advance for help.
Cerenkov.
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