De Sitter universe, is it compatible with darkenergy?

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A De Sitter Universe is characterized by being dominated by dark energy with a constant energy density, leading to a unique form of expansion. In this model, the universe expands at a fixed Hubble constant, remaining static in a specific sense without singularities in the past. The mathematical representation shows that with 100% dark energy, the scale factor evolves exponentially over time. The discussion also touches on whether De Sitter anticipated the model's compatibility with cosmic acceleration. Overall, the De Sitter Universe serves as a foundational concept in understanding dark energy's role in cosmic expansion.
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Maybe obvious, but I will ask it here.
Is a "De Sitter Universe (as a model) compatible with dark energy, and if so, is it then also compatible with constant-dark-energy-density?

kind regards
Hurk4
 
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hurk4 said:
Maybe obvious, but I will ask it here.
Is a "De Sitter Universe (as a model) compatible with dark energy, and if so, is it then also compatible with constant-dark-energy-density?

kind regards
Hurk4

As I understand it, a De Sitter Universe is what you get when the universe is dominated by dark energy, with a constant energy density.

Cheers -- sylas
 
sylas said:
As I understand it, a De Sitter Universe is what you get when the universe is dominated by dark energy, with a constant energy density.

Cheers -- sylas

Dear Sylas.

As a (math. model):
1) also when this domination is exact 100% ?
2) is it static?
3) is its space-time restricted?

regards
hurk4
 
hurk4 said:
Dear Sylas.

As a (math. model):
1) also when this domination is exact 100% ?
2) is it static?
3) is its space-time restricted?

regards
hurk4

I am not sure what you mean. I'm a novice in cosmology, so I'm not good with terminology, sorry. The simplest case, which is what de Sitter worked out, I believe, is 100% dark energy. In this case, the universe is static in an interesting kind of way. It is always expanding, but the Hubble constant is fixed for all time. There's also no singularity in the past, it simply remains at 100% dark energy forever. This is also a flat universe, and so (ignoring topological oddities) it would be infinite. Infinite in space, in time to the future, and in time to the past.

The scale factor is
a = e^{Ht}​
t is time, and H is the Hubble constant. The Hubble constant at a point in time is defined to be
\frac{\dot{a}}{a} = \frac{He^{Ht}}{e^{Ht}} = H​

The differential equation for scale factor in the simple FRW models is
\dot{a} = a H_0 \sqrt{\Omega_r a^{-4} + \Omega_m a^{-3} + \Omega_k a^{-2} + \Omega_\Lambda}​

100% dark energy means ΩΛ is 1 and the other densities are zero, so it becomes the very simple equation
\dot{a} = a H_0​
from which we get the exponential function for the scale factor.

Cheers -- sylas
 
sylas said:
The simplest case, which is what de Sitter worked out, I believe, is 100% dark energy. In this case, the universe is static in an interesting kind of way. It is always expanding, but the Hubble constant is fixed for all time. There's also no singularity in the past, it simply remains at 100% dark energy forever. This is also a flat universe, and so (ignoring topological oddities) it would be infinite. Infinite in space, in time to the future, and in time to the past.

The scale factor is
a = e^{Ht}​
t is time, and H is the Hubble constant. The Hubble constant at a point in time is defined to be
\frac{\dot{a}}{a} = \frac{He^{Ht}}{e^{Ht}} = H​


Cheers -- sylas

Static?, (in an interesting kind of way)
Why then t dependent?

Regards
hurk4
 
Why then t dependent?
It isn't, if you switch to static coordinates. It's all explained in the Wikipedia article.
 
Ich said:
It isn't, if you switch to static coordinates. It's all explained in the Wikipedia article.

Ok, thank you.

regards hurk4
 
sylas said:
As I understand it, a De Sitter Universe is what you get when the universe is dominated by dark energy, with a constant energy density.

Cheers -- sylas

Could or did De Sitter foresee in his time that his model was compatible with the acceleration? Can we see from his model how this acceleration works out, e.g. linear or exponential or?

kind regards
hurk4
 
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