iced199 said:
Oh. So does the fact that Lambda is 0.3 is approximately the amount of normal matter plus dark matter percentage and that dark energy is approximately 0.7 and 70% mean anything? I think that was a contributing factor to the advocation of dark energy, right? Just an observation.
I know what you mean, but the Lambda that Einstein put in the basic GR equation is not a number like 0.3 or a percentage. It is a small constant instinctive bias towards curvature that space has and which has been estimated. I can dig up the estimate if you are interested.
The exact figure is not so important but in a rough way it is comparable to the very slight curvature along a circle whose radius is, say, 15 billion light years. Miniscule!
You can also express that curvature by talking about the constant energy density that there would have to be throughout space in order to PRODUCE that amount of curvature. It is bewilderingly small. If you know what a joule of energy is. (The size thump when you drop a book onto your desk from about 1 foot high off the table, or the work it took to lift it in the first place.)
If that unit is familiar, then the energy that would produce the curvature Lambda I'm talking about is only 0.6 NANOjoules per cubic meter of volume. 0.6 BILLIONTHS of a joule in a cubic meter.
However that energy might be a fiction. Just a way of describing this very slight curvature (using the fact that in GR energy bends space in a predictable way). If you LIKE thinking in those terms then converting Lambda from a curvature into an energy density gives 0.6 nanojoules per m
3
It is THAT 0.6 nanojoules which is the 73% (of the total "critical" density) which is people are always talking about.
"Critical" energy density, a somewhat artificial notion, is the density which
in the absence of the tiny bias Lambda
would be needed to balance our expansion rate and give exact spatial flatness.
It s about 0.82 nanojoules per m
3.
But actually what we HAVE by way of ordinary and dark matter plus radiation is only 0.22 nJ/m
3.
This is only about 27% of critical---in the absence of Lambda it would not be enough to balance the expansion rate and result in the (approximate) flatness which instruments like WMAP observe!
So there has to be something else! Either an constant inherent curvature bias Lambda, or it's equivalent in energy terms amounting to 0.6 nJ/m
3.
Which in a roundabout way kind of answers your question

WMAP did not "see dark energy". Nobody did. But we think we see the
effects of a slightly positive curvature term in the main GR equation. We see it both in the observed (near) flatness and in a very very slow increase in rates of distance expansion (in absolute, not percentage rate terms).