Originally posted by (Q)
Marcus
the original post by (Q) called attention to the energy that has been lost from the universe by wavelength stretching caused by expansion of space.
Has the energy really been lost? Redshifted photons would indicate it has been lost...
conservation of energy has not been proven in GR
and so we can't assume that energy is conserved
at baez' website at the Usenet Physics FAQ this is
discussed and one of the possibilities is that the
energy is simply lost
since there is no conservation law that is one possibility
but also, it could be that someone will invent some new
mathematics, and a new theory will be tested and supplant
GR and in this new theory there will BE energy conservation
and people will find some place they hadnt thought of, like
dark energy, where the energy went and they will say
"Ahah!, there was conservation all along, it just went in to
the xyz blahblah."
but for us now, by occam's razor we kind of have to say simply
it is lost---because that is the simplest thing to suppose
and it does not violate any law to suppose it.
I assume you see the flaw in what RW says about d=E/volume.
It is Astro 1 fact that the universe was once light-dominated and now is matter-dominated because the radiation density falls off
with the fourthpower of stretch while the matter falls off with the
third. The number of photons per volume goes down (third power)
and the energy of each one goes down (linear). So light energy thins out faster than matter energy. Is this clear or do I have to be more articulate (this is coffee time)