CCC-I: Challenging Observations & New Picture of the Universe

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In summary: There is no observed evolution in iron abundance in quasars from z=0 to z>6. Therefore, if quasars are at the distance and lookback time implied by their redshifts, they formed in regions containing materials of solar or super-solar metallicities when the universe was less than a billion years old.
  • #1
Garth
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There will be a conference entitled 1st Crisis In Cosmology Conference (CCC-I)

1st Crisis In Cosmology Conference (CCC-I):
Challenging Observations and the Quest
for a New Picture of the Universe

June 23-25, 2005
Monção, Portugal

Session topics have yet to be finalized.

Program
CCC-I will consider the present state of understanding of the universe in the light of the increasing number of observations that challenge the conventional cosmological model. Participants will address observations such as the non-Gaussianity of the CMB, the excessive apparent ages of high-z galaxies, discrepancies in dark matter observations, the early formation of large-scale structure, the increasingly discordant results for light element abundances, the angular-size/redshift relation, and others. There will be critical examination of the adequacy of current cosmological models - including their theoretical foundations - to accommodate recent challenges. There will be consideration of viable alternative explanations (including Cosmologies without a Big Bang) and proposals for discriminating observational tests.

Any takers?

Garth
 
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  • #2
Do you know the history of Astronomy? It's deja vous all over again.
 
  • #3
With Eugene Savov on the organizing committee, the scientific validity of this conference is, shall we say, questionable.
 
  • #4
saltydog said:
Do you know the history of Astronomy? It's deja vous all over again.
There has to be a periodic shake-up, for sure, but astronomy/cosmology is WAY overdue for a reality check.

"Distant" quasars (z~6.5) are being discovered that are apparently being powered by black holes that have masses equivalent to several hundred billion suns. Unfortunately (for the standard model) they also have metallicities in the same range as our sun. How can this be? How can something that has existed for less than a half-billion years after the Big Bang have accreted several billions of solar masses of highly-metallized material (from first-generation supernovas, presumably) and have a metallicity equivalent to that of a star several stellar generations removed from the Big Bang? This is not an insignificant problem. (Understatement Police are dragging me away as I type!) :uhh:
 
  • #5
several hundred billions

turbo-1 said:
There has to be a periodic shake-up, for sure, but astronomy/cosmology is WAY overdue for a reality check.

"Distant" quasars (z~6.5) are being discovered that are apparently being powered by black holes that have masses equivalent to several hundred billion suns. Unfortunately (for the standard model) they also have metallicities in the same range as our sun. How can this be? How can something that has existed for less than a half-billion years after the Big Bang have accreted several billions of solar masses of highly-metallized material (from first-generation supernovas, presumably) and have a metallicity equivalent to that of a star several stellar generations removed from the Big Bang? This is not an insignificant problem. (Understatement Police are dragging me away as I type!) :uhh:
Which observations require 'several hundred billion' solar star masses to work? What 'highly metallicized materials' are you referring to? Please provide observational examples. I think that is a bunch of bull. NOTE: we have these arguments all the time. Turbo-1 is my friend so be nice. He is a good guy. Just because I disagree does not mean he is wrong.
 
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  • #6
Chronos said:
Which observations require 'several hundred billion' solar star masses to work?
These people studied 3 high-redshift quasars and found each of them had solar or super-solar metallicities AND likely exist in highly metallized elliptical or spheroidal host galaxies with masses equivalent to hundreds of billions or even trillions of suns. The quasars' SMBH cores themselves are each calculated to contain several billions of solar masses.

http://cosmos.as.arizona.edu/~thompson/pubdb/docs/freudling03a.pdf [Broken]

Chronos said:
What 'highly metallicized materials' are you referring to? Please provide observational examples. I think that is a bunch of bull. NOTE: we have these arguments all the time. Turbo-1 is my friend so be nice. He is a good guy. Just because I disagree does not mean he is wrong.
Again, another paper on high-redshift quasars. There is no observed evolution in iron abundance in quasars from z=0 to z>6. Therefore, if quasars are at the distance and lookback time implied by their redshifts, they formed in regions containing materials of solar or super-solar metallicities when the universe was less than a billion years old.

http://cosmos.as.arizona.edu/~thompson/pubdb/docs/barth03a.pdf [Broken]

It might be a "bunch of bull", but there are a LOT more papers like this in the literature, and if you follow the citations, you will see how the standard model is being constrained (strained would be a better word) by the high metallicities. Already, the model requires generations of extremely massive stars going supernova before these quasars and their massive hosts can form. The Webb telescope and the LBT will allow observations of fainter, more highly-redshifted quasars, and each one will push the BB model farther into the corner, unless we can detect an evolution in metallicity (lower metallicity in higher-redshift quasars) at some era. So far, it's not happening.
 
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  • #7
Well, it turns out the back half of the bull was on my side of the fence. How embarrasing. :blushing: Round conceded. The metallicity and SMBH issues are in play. Thanks for reminding me a little research can be constructive. :smile:

Formation of the Black Holes in the Highest Redshift Quasars
http://arxiv.org/abs/astro-ph/0406217
... black hole masses may reach ~10^9 msun as early as z=9 starting from stellar seeds

High redshift quasars and the supermassive black hole mass budget: constraints on quasar formation models
http://arxiv.org/abs/astro-ph/0311008
 
  • #8
Jesus. My goodness people. Now, I love Astronomy but are we not much further than Ptolemy and his epicycles? I'm disappointed and you know, we're in a golden age of Astronomy too. Suppose they were too back then. I'm very "tolerant" though for our limitations and feel it a joy to be living during such a golden age!
 
  • #9
Chronos said:
The metallicity and SMBH issues are in play. Thanks for reminding me a little research can be constructive. :smile:
If current trends continue (discovery of even more highly redshifted quasars with solar and super-solar metallicities), what does that tell us about the Universe?

Possibilities include:

1) There was a Big Bang, but it occurred much longer ago than 13.7Gy. We are extrapolating redshift (as cosmological expansion) incorrectly, and the Universe is much older than 13.7Gy.
2) There was a Big Bang 13.7Gy ago, but somehow we have "misunderestimated" (to quote President Malaprop) the rate at which heavy elements form. This may allow z~6 quasar SMBHs to form at solar-like metallicity in the <1Gy time since the BB, although this is VERY tightly constrained by time, accretion rates, mass budget, etc, and is looking less and less likely all the time. A single massive z>7 quasar with typical metallicity will probably close the door on this possibility (or as Chronos says "a stake in the heart!")
3) There was a Big Bang 13.7Gy ago. Quasars (and perhaps some related objects) have intrinsic redshifts, so they only appear to be very distant and old. They are in fact younger and closer and are smaller with more modest luminosities. If their redshifts are not due entirely to cosmological expansion, then they do not have to be 1-10 Billion mSol SMBHs residing in Trillion mSol host galaxies. This would give the heirarchical model of galaxy formation a bit of breathing room - the current understanding of quasars requires that the most massive and active galaxies formed very early, which stands the H-model on its head. Of course Arp, the Burbidges, and others have been roundly ridiculed for proposing the concept of intrinsic redshifts, so the astronomical community is going to avoid this possibility like the plague.
4) There never was a Big Bang. We live in a steady-state universe in which even the most distant things we can ever see are roughly equivalent in metallicity to stars in own neighborhood. "Cosmological" redshift is not due to expansion of the universe, but to energy loss as EM interacts with the fields through which it propagates. The more distance EM has to travel, the more it is redshifted. Another "third rail" idea that can kill the career of an astronomer, but what if it's true?

There are lots more possibilites, including VSL, and perhaps some mix-and-match combinations of the above, but you can see where this is going. Standard-model cosmology has a lot of problems, requiring the invention of non-baryonic dark matter, dark energy, inflation, etc, to keep it afloat. It is impossible to refute all these epicycles, just as it is impossible to refute any ideas that are taken on faith. The observed high metallicities of high-redshift quasars WILL cause all these ideas to be challenged, though. It is just a matter of time. When Webb comes on-line, or when the LBT is fully operational and some spunky graduate student measures super-solar metallicity in a quasar at z~7-8 or so, the 13.7Gy Big Bang universe will be absolutely untenable. Hopefully, the standard model will be seriously re-evaluated and not just patched with another epicycle or two. The next several years will be an interesting time.
 
  • #10
One viable possibility, yes you have already guessed it, is Self Creation Cosmology!

SCC nucleosynthesis, (i.e. in its Einstein conformal frame) is that of the linearly expanding or “Freely Coasting” Cosmology in which the process lasts much longer than in the standard model. This results in a high primordial metallicity and an age of 14.4 Gyr. DM is baryonic (- mainly black holes?) and DE is not required at all. The freely coasting models, SCC or otherwise, do not require Inflation in the first place and so saltydog three of those epicycles are dispensed with at a stroke.
Two problems with the theory is that the present non-observation of DM requires explanation and deuterium has to be produced by spallation.

However the theory is being tested at this moment by the Gravity Probe B satellite experiment, and we hope for a result early next year.

Garth
 
  • #11
Deuterium abundance is a problem in just about every model, so SCC is in good company. And CDM has always been a thorn as well. While mechanisms like MOND are appealing, evidence of exceptions to that explanation are also too numerous to be disregarded. I think it is unlikely we can come up with a working model that does not include some amount of CDM in a form not yet detected.

There are some big pieces missing in the puzzle, and we have pretty much been stumbling around in the dark searching for them. I like to think the LHC will produce some of the answers. It appears promising we may find the elusive Higgs boson. And that in itself would be a remarkable achievement. But reaching the Planck energy is out of the question and it is very optimistic to hope to find a lower threshold, as suggested by some higher dimensional models.

There some other interesting ideas afloat:

Structure in a Loitering Universe
http://arxiv.org/abs/astro-ph/9212002

Did the Universe loiter at high redshifts?
http://arxiv.org/abs/astro-ph/0410221
 
  • #12
How about string theory and Branes? Do these hold any hope at resolving discrepancies?

How about other theories such as loop quantum gravity?
 
  • #13
Chronos said:
Deuterium abundance is a problem in just about every model, so SCC is in good company. And CDM has always been a thorn as well. While mechanisms like MOND are appealing, evidence of exceptions to that explanation are also too numerous to be disregarded. I think it is unlikely we can come up with a working model that does not include some amount of CDM in a form not yet detected.
Here is another paper, published today, " A case for nucleosynthesis in slowly evolving models " on the concordance of the freely coasting model with cosmological relative abundances and other constraints.

Garth
 
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  • #14
Another problem with the standard model is the non random alignment of the large scale multipoles as in Kate Land and Jo˜ao Magueijo's paper published today The axis of evil
We examine previous claims for a preferred axis at (b, l)  (60,−100) in the cosmic radiation anisotropy, by generalizing the concept of multipole planarity to any shape preference (a concept we define mathematically). Contrary to earlier claims, we find that the amount of power concentrated in planar modes for ℓ = 2, 3 is not inconsistent with isotropy and Gaussianity. The multipoles’ alignment, however, is indeed anomalous, and extends up to ℓ = 5 rejecting statistical isotropy with a probability in excess of 99.9%. There is also an uncanny correlation of azimuthal phases between ℓ = 3 and ℓ = 5. We are unable to blame these effects on foreground contamination or large-scale systematic errors. We show how this reappraisal may be crucial in identifying the theoretical model behind the anomaly.
Does this constitute a "crisis"?

Garth
 
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  • #15
Garth said:
Another problem with the standard model is the non random alignment of the large scale multipoles as in Kate Land and Jo˜ao Magueijo's paper published today The axis of evil
Does this constitute a "crisis"?

Garth
Garth, the paper you linked to is not the one you quoted from, but it is compelling reading nonetheless, touching on problems the BB exhibits in regard to neucleosynthesis, elemental abundances, etc.
 
  • #16
Whoops sorry this is what I meant: The axis of evil
:blushing:

Again, "Does this constitute a 'crisis'?" If not then how about, and on a different tack, this paper, which was revised on the physics-arXiv today Evidence for new physics from clusters ?
However, recent other indications of sigma8 favor a high normalization. In this case, the assumption that the baryonic content observed in clusters actually reflects the primordial value has to be relaxed : either there exists a large baryonic dark component in the Universe or baryons in clusters have undergone a large depletion during the formation of these structures. We concluded that the baryon fraction in clusters is not representative and therefore that an essential piece of the physics of baryons in clusters is missing in standard structure formation scenario.

Baryonic DM?

Garth
 
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  • #17
saltydog said:
I'm very "tolerant" though for our limitations and feel it a joy to be living during such a golden age!

An excellent perspective, saltydog.
 
  • #18
While many problems remain, the 'standard' model is still very sound. I don't understand why it is so robustly attacked. I have yet to hear a lucid argument to the contrary that makes any sense.
 
  • #19
Chronos said:
While many problems remain, the 'standard' model is still very sound. I don't understand why it is so robustly attacked. I have yet to hear a lucid argument to the contrary that makes any sense.

First it is good science to question even the best established theories. Secondly I question your definition of "very sound": no Higgs Boson, no identified non-baryonic DM particle/s, no identifiable DE, very early evolved structures, early metallicity, lack of low l WMAP fluctuations, where do I stop? Now there may be solutions to these anomalies within the standard model but until then I would not count that model to be robustly established.
Furthermore, the fact that the consensus opinion among the cosmological community does think it is sound is even more cause for concern.

Garth
 
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  • #20
Garth said:
First it is good science to question even the best established theories.
You are absolutely right. Here is a quote from the good doctor. While he would certainly find satisfaction in the concept that his work is still regarded as valuable, I think he would shudder at the thought that any real physicists would consider his theories perfect and complete. It was not in his nature to treat any scientific ideas as if they were somehow sacred or unquestionable.

"How does it happen that a properly endowed natural scientist comes to concern himself with epistemology? Is there no more valuable work in his specialty? I hear many of my colleagues saying, and I sense it from many more, that they feel this way. I cannot share this sentiment. ...Concepts that have proven useful in ordering things easily achieve such an authority over us that we forget their earthly origins and accept them as unalterable givens. Thus they come to be stamped as 'necessities of thought,' 'a priori givens,' etc. The path of scientific advance is often made impassable for a long time through such errors. For that reason, it is by no means an idle game if we become practiced in analyzing the long common place concepts and exhibiting those circumstances upon which their justification and usefulness depend, how they have grown up, individually, out of the givens of experience. By this means, their all-too-great authority will be broken."

Einstein
 
  • #21
Garth said:
First it is good science to question even the best established theories. Secondly I question your definition of "very sound": no Higgs Boson, no identified non-baryonic DM particle/s, no identifiable DE, very early evolved structures, early metallicity, lack of low l WMAP fluctuations, where do I stop? Now there may be solutions to these anomalies within the standard model but until then I would not count that model to be robustly established.
Furthermore, the fact that the consensus opinion among the cosmological community does think it is sound is even more cause for concern.

Garth
Duh. I could've sworn I typed hot big bang. At least that's what I was thinking - not the entire standard model. There is a very good chance the 'standard' model of the future will look different than the one of the present. But, I see little chance it will not include a hot big bang.
 
  • #22
Chronos said:
There is a very good chance the 'standard' model of the future will look different than the one of the present. But, I see little chance it will not include a hot big bang.
Right now, the universe of the standard model is homogeneous on large scales and isotropic, with no preferred reference frame. The cosmic microwave background (echo of the Big Bang) should look the same in every direction. It does not look the same in every direction, however, according to the folks who are working with the WMAP data. In fact the large-scale anisotropy suggest that (barring a systemic contamination of the data) WMAP data may be demonstrating some kind of preferred reference frame.

http://citebase.eprints.org/cgi-bin/fulltext?format=application/pdf&identifier=oai%3AarXiv.org%3Aastro-ph%2F0403353 [Broken]

If the microwave background is NOT the echo of the Big Bang, but is instead the ground state energy of the vacuum, and if the vacuum is polarizable by the presence of mass (that silly ZPE gravity model again) we should expect to see an anisotropy oriented with respect to the galactic plane (dominant mass in our neighborhood). It will be very interesting to see the 2nd year WMAP data - they have to release it sometime. :grumpy: The delay is frustrating, and it must be somewhat unsettling to adherents of the standard model.
 
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  • #23
turbo-1 said:
Right now, the universe of the standard model is homogeneous on large scales and isotropic, with no preferred reference frame. The cosmic microwave background (echo of the Big Bang) should look the same in every direction. It does not look the same in every direction, however, according to the folks who are working with the WMAP data. In fact the large-scale anisotropy suggest that (barring a systemic contamination of the data) WMAP data may be demonstrating some kind of preferred reference frame.

http://citebase.eprints.org/cgi-bin/fulltext?format=application/pdf&identifier=oai%3AarXiv.org%3Aastro-ph%2F0403353 [Broken]
You will note that paper has numerous citations there are a number of different opinions on what, if anything the data shows. I did not, however, see anything suggesting a preferred reference frame.
turbo-1 said:
...If the microwave background is NOT the echo of the Big Bang, but is instead the ground state energy of the vacuum, and if the vacuum is polarizable by the presence of mass (that silly ZPE gravity model again) we should expect to see an anisotropy oriented with respect to the galactic plane (dominant mass in our neighborhood). It will be very interesting to see the 2nd year WMAP data - they have to release it sometime. :grumpy: The delay is frustrating, and it must be somewhat unsettling to adherents of the standard model.
The delay in releasing the 2nd year data is disappointing. The official word is the WMAP team believes there is a systematic error in the data. It would be unsettling if they released the data without making a painstaking effort to eliminate any such errors. The 1st year data may itself be contaminated, which may explain some of the apparent anomolies. The difficulty in extracting the raw data should not be underestimated.
 
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  • #24
Chronos said:
You will note that paper has numerous citations there are a number of different opinions on what, if anything the data shows. I did not, however, see anything suggesting a preferred reference frame.
In the standard model, the CMB is assumed to be the echo of the Big Bang, and it is expected to be isotropic. The WMAP data shows that the CMB is anisotropic on multiple scales, and that the sky to the north of our galactic plane looks different from the sky to the south of our galactic plane. It's not just the temperature, either - the polarization of the CMB correlates to the temperature anisotropies.

http://citebase.eprints.org/cgi-bin/citations?id=oai:arXiv.org:astro-ph/0306048 [Broken]

If the CMB is the echo of the BB, contamination from the effects of our galaxy might be able to cause anisotropies in the polarization of the CMB, but it should not be able to affect anisotropies in the temperature of the CMB. Anisotropies exist in both temperature and polarization, and they correlate to more than 10 standard deviations, according to the paper above. Some people have speculated that the dipole anisotropy (largest scale) could be caused by our movement relative to the universal background frame of the CMB, but how could such movement cause similar anisotropies in the polarization maps?

Chronos said:
The delay in releasing the 2nd year data is disappointing. The official word is the WMAP team believes there is a systematic error in the data. It would be unsettling if they released the data without making a painstaking effort to eliminate any such errors. The 1st year data may itself be contaminated, which may explain some of the apparent anomolies. The difficulty in extracting the raw data should not be underestimated.
The delay is more than dissapointing - it is quite disconcerting. If there IS systemic error in the WMAP data, how can that be reconciled with the results of COBE, which found the same large-scale temperature anisotropy (although at a lower resolution)? COBE would have been susceptible to an entirely different set of systemic errors, yet it found essentially the same temperature anisotropy. This does not absolutely rule out systemic error as a cause of the observed anisotropies, but taken together with the observed correlation of the polarization data, the chance of such coincidental systemic errors must be extremely remote.

According to NASA:

http://map.gsfc.nasa.gov/m_mm/ms_status.html

NASA said:
Aug. 2004
Three years at L2
The WMAP observatory continues to operate flawlessly. Data calibration, systematic error analyses, and preparations for a series of on-going public data releases continue.

So why aren't other years' data being released? I predict that comparing WMAP scans year-to-year reveals a dynamicism in small-angle anisotropies that is inconsistent with their being caused by variations in large-scale structure in the early universe. If WMAP2 and others merely confirmed WMAP1 in general, there would be no reason to delay the release of the data - the "systemic" errors could be identified and zeroed out at any time.
 
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  • #25
your predictions sounds very interesting. its is golden age of
discoveries.
 
  • #26
Cosmology is a difficult subject, so much opinions and room for errors. The distances and timescales are quite dizzying, to say the least. But that don't mean we should stop trying to gain more answers, eh? :-)

What is the latest, most accurate value of the 'Hubble cosntant'? Is there a consensus on that?

ta,
E
 
  • #27
The problem with the value of this constant only shows
how vulnerable the BB theory is.
 
  • #28
tubo-1 dipole anisotropy is a prediction of the BB model (well not a necessary prediction, but it would be pretty bloody amazing if there was not some dipole isotropy in the CMB). In the BB model the universe is assumed to be isotrpoic in one frame only, the dipole anistropy in temp. signifies nothing more amazing than the Earth is moving relative to the surface of last scattering. The dipole isotropy is a generic featur eof even the most simplistic BB models.

The tiny quadrupole anistropy (mostly manifested in the polarization) is something that is predicted in the standard cosmology and is actually a property of the surface of last scattering rather than a property of the Earth's movement.
 
  • #29
jcsd said:
tubo-1 dipole anisotropy is a prediction of the BB model (well not a necessary prediction, but it would be pretty bloody amazing if there was not some dipole isotropy in the CMB). In the BB model the universe is assumed to be isotrpoic in one frame only, the dipole anistropy in temp. signifies nothing more amazing than the Earth is moving relative to the surface of last scattering. The dipole isotropy is a generic featur eof even the most simplistic BB models.

The tiny quadrupole anistropy (mostly manifested in the polarization) is something that is predicted in the standard cosmology and is actually a property of the surface of last scattering rather than a property of the Earth's movement.
OK, here is a paper that illustrates what I was talking about. The concept is not simple dipole anisotropy, which might be naively expect from gross movements with respect to the CMB reference frame. It is the question of why the "texture" of the CMB map is different North of the galactic plane than it is South of the galactic plane. This difference in smaller-scale anisotropy cannot be explained by the naive expectation (or at least tolerance) of a dipole anisotropy. Our movement relative to the CMB might be expected to slightly shift all the observed values of the CMB frequencies in some models, but there is no reasonable way to explain how this movement could make the texture or relative frequency depth of the small scale anisotropies in the Southern plane different from those in the Northern plane.

http://citebase.eprints.org/cgi-bin/fulltext?format=application/pdf&identifier=oai%3AarXiv.org%3Aastro-ph%2F0403353 [Broken]

From the paper:
We have shown that the planes defined by the octopole are nearly aligned with the plane of the Doppler-subtracted quadrupole, that these planes are strongly correlated with the ecliptic plane, with the dipole, and with the equinoxes. Each of these correlations is inconsistent with gaussian random skies at ≥ 99.9% C.L., and at least two of them are statistically independent. We have also seen that the ecliptic threads between a hot and a cold spot of the combined Doppler-subtracted-quadrupole and octopole map – following a node line across about 1/3 of the sky, and separating the three strong extrema from the three weak extrema of the map. We find it hard to believe that these correlations are just statistical fluctuations around standard inflationary cosmology’s prediction of statistically isotropic Gaussian
random aℓm’s.

WMAP is often touted as a highly-precise verification of the standard model. Why?
 
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  • #30
Eridanus1 said:
What is the latest, most accurate value of the 'Hubble cosntant'? Is there a consensus on that?

The Hubble constant problem is largely solved. We've converged on a value of:

71 km/s/Mpc +- 3

It looks like both the 50-group and the 100-group were wrong. :cool:
 
  • #31
I'm personally going to be skeptical of the Hubble constant value above until it survives uncontested for several more years. There have been numerous occassions since they Hubble constant was formulated when new values have been outside the error bars of the previous estimate.
 
  • #32
ohwilleke said:
I'm personally going to be skeptical of the Hubble constant value above until it survives uncontested for several more years.

Fair enough, though I think if you double the error bar (71+-6), it's a pretty safe bet it's in that range, even considering the discrepant measurements
 
  • #33
turbo-1 said:
OK, here is a paper that illustrates what I was talking about. The concept is not simple dipole anisotropy, which might be naively expect from gross movements with respect to the CMB reference frame. It is the question of why the "texture" of the CMB map is different North of the galactic plane than it is South of the galactic plane. This difference in smaller-scale anisotropy cannot be explained by the naive expectation (or at least tolerance) of a dipole anisotropy. Our movement relative to the CMB might be expected to slightly shift all the observed values of the CMB frequencies in some models, but there is no reasonable way to explain how this movement could make the texture or relative frequency depth of the small scale anisotropies in the Southern plane different from those in the Northern plane.

http://citebase.eprints.org/cgi-bin/fulltext?format=application/pdf&identifier=oai%3AarXiv.org%3Aastro-ph%2F0403353 [Broken]

What's naive about expecting dipole anisotropy? Even the paper you cite has no probelm with it. As I siad earlier it's soemthing that is acceptable in ALL big bang models not just some as you say; simple reason is that all big bang models locally incoprate special relativty, so Lorentz transforming a local refernce frame will shift the frequencies (which indeed is not bounded as relative motion can cause any frequency shift, though we would expect it to be relatively small as it is sensible to expect our solar syetm not to be moving at a termenodus speed relative to the CMB) of the photons arriving at that point in the expected manner.
WMAP is often touted as a highly-precise verification of the standard model. Why?

Unbfortunaely my knowledge of the exact reuslts of WMAP is not gerat enough to give an opinion on the conclsuion of the paper, though there are certainly it seems to me that the usal view is that such alignments are due to stasitcal anomalies depsite what the paper claims.
 
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  • #34
jcsd said:
What's naive about expecting dipole anisotropy?
I use the word "naive" as shorthand for "one might reasonably expect". I reasonably expect that if the background microwave echo of the BB is the "ground state" of our universe, the movements of the Earth, Sun, Milky Way, Local Cluster, etc in respect to that background will lead to slight shifting of the apparent wavelengths of the EM emitted by the BB. The strongest shift (caused by the largest motion relative to that frame) would result in a dipole anisotropy. In other words, the stuff in front of us would be blueshifted and the stuff in back of us would be redshifted.
 
  • #35
Turbo-1, the 'naive' in this context usually means 'over-simplistic'

The CMB was not emitted by the big bang, it was emitted approx. 300,000 yrs after the big bang.

'Slight' is really incorrect as I siad such relative movement can cause ANY amount of doppler shift and though our velcoity relatiev to the CMB frame is not too huge the anisotropy cause dby this movemtn is by far the largest anisotropy in the CMB and is not particularly difficult to detect.
 
<h2>1. What is CCC-I and what does it stand for?</h2><p>CCC-I stands for Challenging Observations & New Picture of the Universe. It is a scientific theory that proposes a new understanding of the universe based on challenging observations and data.</p><h2>2. How does CCC-I differ from other theories about the universe?</h2><p>CCC-I differs from other theories in that it takes into account challenging observations and data that have not been fully explained by other theories. It also proposes a new picture of the universe that may challenge traditional beliefs.</p><h2>3. What are some of the key observations that support CCC-I?</h2><p>Some key observations that support CCC-I include the accelerating expansion of the universe, the existence of dark matter and dark energy, and the large-scale structure of the universe.</p><h2>4. How does CCC-I explain the accelerating expansion of the universe?</h2><p>CCC-I proposes that the accelerating expansion of the universe is due to the presence of dark energy, which is a mysterious force that counteracts the pull of gravity and causes the universe to expand at an increasing rate.</p><h2>5. Is CCC-I widely accepted in the scientific community?</h2><p>CCC-I is a relatively new theory and is still being debated and studied by scientists. While it has gained some support and interest, it is not yet widely accepted in the scientific community and more research is needed to fully understand its implications.</p>

1. What is CCC-I and what does it stand for?

CCC-I stands for Challenging Observations & New Picture of the Universe. It is a scientific theory that proposes a new understanding of the universe based on challenging observations and data.

2. How does CCC-I differ from other theories about the universe?

CCC-I differs from other theories in that it takes into account challenging observations and data that have not been fully explained by other theories. It also proposes a new picture of the universe that may challenge traditional beliefs.

3. What are some of the key observations that support CCC-I?

Some key observations that support CCC-I include the accelerating expansion of the universe, the existence of dark matter and dark energy, and the large-scale structure of the universe.

4. How does CCC-I explain the accelerating expansion of the universe?

CCC-I proposes that the accelerating expansion of the universe is due to the presence of dark energy, which is a mysterious force that counteracts the pull of gravity and causes the universe to expand at an increasing rate.

5. Is CCC-I widely accepted in the scientific community?

CCC-I is a relatively new theory and is still being debated and studied by scientists. While it has gained some support and interest, it is not yet widely accepted in the scientific community and more research is needed to fully understand its implications.

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