Could a universal Oort cloud structure cause expansive acceleration?

In summary, the conversation discusses the possibility of a universal "Oort cloud" structure causing expansive acceleration. The idea of a giant sphere of invisible non-reactive matter leftover from the big bang is brought up, with the suggestion that it could explain the acceleration seen in the universe. However, it is pointed out that there is no scientific basis for this hypothesis. The conversation then shifts to the concept of the universe having no center and being homogeneous and isotropic, with the expansion being due to the distance between galaxies increasing over time. The conversation ends with a discussion about the idea of a large shell of non-interactive matter causing the expansion through gravity alone, and the need for further testing to support this hypothesis.
  • #1
superdave
150
3
Could a universal "Oort cloud" structure cause expansive acceleration?

Could there be a giant sphere of invisible non-reactive matter (neutrinos?), left over from the big bang, so massive that it's gravity is pulling galaxies outward?

I know the Oort cloud doesn't pull planets outward, but that's because the mass is small compared to the Sun, and not concentrated but distributed relatively evenly around the solar system.

But if there was 73% of the universe's matter (the estimate I saw for the amount of mass-energy in the form of Dark Energy) as a thin sphere on the edge of the 'expansion radius' of the big bang, could it explain the acceleration we see?

As the initial velocity of the 'cloud' slows due to the gravitational force of the inner universe, the distances between galaxies and the cloud would decrease and the gravitational force between galaxies and the cloud would increase, causing what would look like a continued outward acceleration (until everything smacked into each other, turning the universe into one giant hollow shell).

Obviously I have no scientific basis for this hypothesis, it's just curiosity if it was even possible. I teach HS physics and we got into a discussion about this.
 
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  • #2


superdave said:
... as a thin sphere on the edge of the 'expansion radius' of the big bang ...

There is no such thing, so the answer to your question is no.
 
  • #3


phinds said:
There is no such thing, so the answer to your question is no.

But why? We can measure our galaxies position relative to other galaxies. Are you saying there is no place in the universe where other galaxies are not evenly distributed in all directions?
 
  • #4


I am saying that the universe has no center and thus there IS no such thing as a "radius of expansion"
 
  • #5


phinds said:
I am saying that the universe has no center and thus there IS no such thing as a "radius of expansion"

So it if has no center, then in every galaxy in the universe, there should be a nearly equal distribution of other galaxies in all direction. So do astronomers assume that this is the case? That no matter where you are in the universe, matter is ultimately even in all directions?

I'm trying to understand what this means.
 
  • #6


Yes, this is one of the two fundamental properties of the universe. It is called istropy (the universe looks the same in all directions, from all points in it). The other is homogeneity (at large scales, a given volumn of the universe contains the same amount of matter as an equal volume elsewhere in the universe).

Edit: you really should read the FAQ in the cosmology seciton.
 
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  • #7


superdave said:
So it if has no center, then in every galaxy in the universe, there should be a nearly equal distribution of other galaxies in all direction. So do astronomers assume that this is the case? That no matter where you are in the universe, matter is ultimately even in all directions?

I'm trying to understand what this means.

As phinds said, this is correct. When we say that the universe is expanding, we mean that the distance in between these galaxies gets larger over time, without the galaxies themselves actually moving.

In the very early universe, rather than a homogeneous distribution of galaxies, the universe was filled with a homogeneous plasma and extremely hot radiation. The evolution of the universe from this state of hot, dense, plasma everywhere is the big bang model. Contrary to its name, it has nothing to do with an explosion, or the universe beginning at a single point. Just that the universe was filled with a very hot, very dense, homogeneous plasma.
 
  • #8


phinds said:
Yes, this is one of the two fundamental properties of the universe. It is called istropy (the universe looks the same in all directions, from all points in it). The other is homogeneity (at large scales, a given volumn of the universe contains the same amount of matter).

Edit: you really should read the FAQ in the cosmology seciton.

The FAQ didn't tell me anything that I didn't already know.

Isotropy and Homogeneity follow from the cosmological principal. Which is really just saying that in any large sample of the universe, the amount and type of matter will be the same (homogeneity) and that in all directions the same things should be observable (isotropy). But every source I've found says that isotropy applies to the laws f the universe (i.e. at any point in the universe, any galaxy that is 10 billion light years away should look like a 10 billion year-old galaxy), not about the actual matter distribution of the universe.

Mark M said:
As phinds said, this is correct. When we say that the universe is expanding, we mean that the distance in between these galaxies gets larger over time, without the galaxies themselves actually moving.

In the very early universe, rather than a homogeneous distribution of galaxies, the universe was filled with a homogeneous plasma and extremely hot radiation. The evolution of the universe from this state of hot, dense, plasma everywhere is the big bang model. Contrary to its name, it has nothing to do with an explosion, or the universe beginning at a single point. Just that the universe was filled with a very hot, very dense, homogeneous plasma.

Right, the universe was a quark-gluon plasma, very hot and dense. Density = Mass/volume. Volume had to increase from a very small number. Because the Mass/energy amount is assumed be constant. As volume increased, due to expansion, the universe cooled, the quarks began to stick together (strong force), asymmetrical annihilation, helium, hydrogen (EM force), stars (gravity), etc...

But okay, let's ignore the idea of an edge to matter in space. (which is a different idea than an edge to space)

Could there be a large scale local phenomena, where there is a large shell of neutrinos or other type of matter that is largely non-interactive except through gravity, pulling our observable universe outward through gravity alone, not through dark energy?

The test for this hypothesis would be to see if the expansion acceleration is increasing for galaxies/clusters further away. Do we have accurate enough measurements of the dark energy expansion to determine that?
 
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  • #9


the simple answer is no.

the complicated answer is still no, but do refer to any modern day introduction to cosmology textbook (math based, for scientists, not the popsci ones). i'll just give you a hint: in Newtonian mechanics even, a spherical shell of matter exerts no net force on something on its inside.
 
  • #10


chill_factor said:
i'll just give you a hint: in Newtonian mechanics even, a spherical shell of matter exerts no net force on something on its inside.

Ah true, I had forgotten all about that. I remember having to solve that same problem for EM. Case closed.
 
  • #11


superdave said:
The FAQ didn't tell me anything that I already know.

Yes, I can see that.

I take it you do not believe in the Cosmological Principle.
 
  • #12


Basically what you are talking about has been a popular research line earlier in the last decade. Here is a 2007 REVIEW article with dozens of references to earlier work.
http://arxiv.org/abs/astro-ph/0702416
The Accelerated Expansion of the Universe Challenged by an Effect of the Inhomogeneities. A Review
Marie-Noëlle Célérier (Observatoire de Paris-Meudon)

The idea is that if you give up on the uniformity assumption (homog and isotrop distribution of matter on scales > 150 Mpc or so) you can imagine lots of different UNEVEN distributions of matter which MIMIC the tiny observed "acceleration".

In fact as the author of this review article observes one does not have to mimic acceleration as such, what one has to do is match the SUPERNOVA DATA. The fact that SNe at a given redshift z are dimmer (in a regular way) than one expects them go be on the basis of a standard FRW model with largescale uniformity.

The author concludes that the problem is NOT to explain the dimmer-than-expected SNe observations but, she says, the problem will be to SELECT the right non-uniform largescale matter distribution and several that seem cabable of explaining the obsrervations.

I remember hearing quite a bit about these research attempts around 2007 and 2008, and not so much lately.

One of the most capable and prominent advocates back then IMHO was David Wiltshire and I think he is still writing articles about this, challenging the cosmological constant.

It's been gone over so much it seems a bit Quixotic to me, tilting at the Lambda windmill. But he is very smart. So you might want to read what he has to say about it recently.
http://arxiv.org/abs/1102.2045
Gravitational energy as dark energy: Cosmic structure and apparent acceleration
http://arxiv.org/abs/0912.5236
Gravitational energy as dark energy: Average observational quantities
http://arxiv.org/abs/0912.5234
Gravitational energy as dark energy: Towards concordance cosmology without Lambda

My impression is that this particular gambit (challenging Lambda using non-uniform matter distribution) has gotton old and is petering out, fizzling so to speak. But it is always respectable to challenge assumptions, in science, and people do it regularly and win notice and approval for doing it. I admire Wiltshire for the quality of his work on this and his persistence. But I notice that his most recent paper is NOT about this. Perhaps he is moving on somewhat.
 
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  • #13


phinds said:
Yes, I can see that.

I take it you do not believe in the Cosmological Principle.

I meant to say 'didn't already know', but I'm sure you realized that.

As for the cosmological principle, it just seems like more of matter of convenience. It's basically, "Well, we can't predict things about the rest of universe unless it's all like our part of it, so we will assume it is"

Still, even if you assume isotropy, observations in only certain directions, like dark flow, show that it's only the laws that are the same in all directions, not specific movement and structure.
 
  • #14


Here is a special issue of the journal Classical and Quantum Gravity (August 2011) which is entirely devoted to inhomogeneous cosmological models
http://iopscience.iop.org/0264-9381/28/16

The David Wiltshire article I just gave you the link for (so you can read it if you want) is included in this special issue of CQG.
Most of the other article that appear in that TOC are either free to read at that website, or if not there, would be available in electronic preprint version on the arxiv. I think you would be well advised to learn what the experts have come up with as alternative explanations of the actual observations, without using Lambda the cosmological constant.
they are apt to be somewhat more "expert" than your giant "oort cloud" idea. they have detailed knowledge of the data to be fitted by the model, and the most plausible realistic-seeming type of inhomogeneity to be employed to get the best fit.

But my impression is that their ideas are still not catching on, and the thing may be petering out.
 
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  • #15


marcus said:
Here is a special issue of the journal Classical and Quantum Gravity (August 2011) which is entirely devoted to inhomogeneous cosmological models
http://iopscience.iop.org/0264-9381/28/16

The David Wiltshire article I just gave you the link for (so you can read it if you want) is included in this special issue of CQG.
Most of the other article that appear in that TOC are either free to read at that website, or if not there, would be available in electronic preprint version on the arxiv. I think you would be well advised to learn what the experts have come up with as alternative explanations of the actual observations, without using Lambda the cosmological constant.
they are apt to be somewhat more "expert" than your giant "oort cloud" idea. they have detailed knowledge of the data to be fitted by the model, and the most plausible realistic-seeming type of inhomogeneity to be employed to get the best fit.

But my impression is that their ideas are still not catching on, and the thing may be petering out.

Thanks, it's pretty interesting stuff. I like it because it seems a lot simpler than adding this unknown, undetected Dark Energy. Occam's razor

The question is, is it petering out because new data doesn't match, or just because it's not popular because accepting inhomogeneity would invalidate a lot of people's models? Is homogeneity the new ''Steady State" model, made more complicated with dark energy to make it fit the data? Is dark energy analogous to Ptolemy adding ellipse after ellipse to planetary orbits to avoid doing away with an Earth centric solar system?
 
  • #16


The question is, is it petering out because new data doesn't match, or just because it's not popular because accepting inhomogeneity would invalidate a lot of people's models? Is homogeneity the new ''Steady State" model, made more complicated with dark energy to make it fit the data? Is dark energy analogous to Ptolemy adding ellipse after ellipse to planetary orbits to avoid doing away with an Earth centric solar system?

No. The difference is that dark energy is heavily supported by evidence, but the steady state model was not.
 

1. What is a universal Oort cloud structure?

A universal Oort cloud structure is a hypothetical region of space beyond the outermost planets in our solar system, where trillions of icy objects are thought to orbit the sun in a spherical shell.

2. How could a universal Oort cloud structure cause expansive acceleration?

It is believed that the gravitational pull of the objects in the Oort cloud could cause a slight acceleration of the expansion of the universe, as the objects are constantly moving away from each other and exerting a force on the universe as a whole.

3. Is there evidence to support the idea of a universal Oort cloud structure?

There is currently no direct evidence for the existence of a universal Oort cloud structure. However, some scientists suggest that the existence of long-period comets could be explained by the gravitational influence of such a structure.

4. Could a universal Oort cloud structure affect our solar system?

It is unlikely that the Oort cloud would have any significant impact on our solar system, as the objects in the cloud are thought to be too far away to exert any noticeable gravitational influence on the planets and other objects in our solar system.

5. How does the idea of a universal Oort cloud structure relate to the theory of the Big Bang?

The theory of a universal Oort cloud structure is often used to explain the observed expansion of the universe. It is believed that the gravitational force of the objects in the Oort cloud could contribute to the overall expansion of the universe, which is a key component of the Big Bang theory.

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