PhilKravitz
How does the uniformity of the universe change over time? Or maybe I should say inhomogeneity versus time.
The discussion revolves around the evolution of the universe's uniformity and inhomogeneity over time, touching on concepts such as entropy, gravitational dynamics, and the formation of structures like black holes. Participants explore theoretical frameworks, including inflationary cosmology and quantum mechanics, while considering the implications of these ideas on the universe's large-scale structure.
Participants express a range of views on the relationship between uniformity, inhomogeneity, and entropy, with no clear consensus on the mechanisms or implications of these processes. Disagreements exist regarding the role of inflation in creating structure and the nature of initial conditions in the universe.
Participants acknowledge various assumptions about the early universe, the role of gravitational dynamics, and the influence of quantum fluctuations, which remain unresolved in the discussion.
PhilKravitz said:How does the uniformity of the universe change over time? Or maybe I should say inhomogeneity versus time.
bapowell said:Great answer Marcus. I think it's important to emphasize that in order to go from 1) to 2) one needs seed perturbations. In inflationary cosmology, these perturbations are generated during the primordial inflationary era.
You're quite right Phil. Inflation does smooth out initial inhomogeneities leading to a flat universe. This was initially viewed as bittersweet: it gives us a homogeneous and isotropic universe (that we observe on large scales), but seems to simultaneously preclude the formation of structure and local inhomogeneity we see around us.PhilKravitz said:I thought it was just the opposite the inflation flattens any pre-existing lumps. If that were true then lumps must be initial conditions of the universe?
The key point is that inflation leads to a homogeneous universe classically. However, the inflaton field is a quantum field. As such, it is subject to inherent quantum fluctuations. As the universe inflates, these fluctuations are amplified and stretched to large scales (in fact, they are stretched to scales larger than the causal horizon since the inflating spacetime expands faster than the Hubble radius). These quantum fluctuations couple to the background spacetime and generate tiny curvature perturbations. When inflation has completed, one is left with a spectrum of seed perturbations across a continuous range of scales -- from super-horizon down to the galactic. According to inflationary cosmology galaxy clusters, galaxies, and so on, originally arose as a quantum fluctuation in the very early universe. To me, that is the most amazing scientific assertion out there.Or if lumps are not initial conditions how does inflation make lumps? And then all the questions like how many, how big, at what time, etc...
bapowell said:To me, that is the most amazing scientific assertion out there.