FRW Universe with Equation of State: Examining Singularity at Big Bang

johne1618
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Does a FRW universe with the equation of state:

$$p = -\frac{\rho c^2}{3}$$

have a singularity at the Big Bang?

I was looking at:

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Penrose–Hawking_singularity_theorems

and trying to decide if such a Universe obeys the "dominant energy condition" for the Penrose-Hawking theorem (energy greater than pressure) or not.
 
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What would it mean to have "a singularity at the big bang"?
Crunch the numbers and see.
 
johne1618 said:
Does a FRW universe with the equation of state:

$$p = -\frac{\rho c^2}{3}$$

have a singularity at the Big Bang?

I was looking at:

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Penrose–Hawking_singularity_theorems

and trying to decide if such a Universe obeys the "dominant energy condition" for the Penrose-Hawking theorem (energy greater than pressure) or not.
The dominant energy condition basically states that mass-energy can never be observed to be flowing faster than light:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Energy_condition#Dominant_energy_condition

So yes, it holds necessarily.

But it's also pretty easy to show it using the Friedmann equations.

First, we can get a(t) using the second derivative equation with \Lambda=0:

{\ddot{a} \over a} = -{4 \pi G \over 3} \left( \rho + {3p \over c^2}\right) = 0

Thus, we can write:
a(t) = a(t=0) + H_0 t

This is important because it shows that a = 0 at some finite time.

Second, energy conservation shows that the energy density of this type of matter scales as \rho \propto 1/a^2. Thus, when a=0, the energy density is infinte, so there's your singularity.

The only universe in which there doesn't appear, at first glance, to be a singularity is the de Sitter universe, where \rho is a constant. But this doesn't quite work out because even a single photon causes a singularity to happen somewhere in the finite past, and a de Sitter universe produces Hawking radiation at its horizon.
 
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