What are the current hot issues in the standard cosmological model?

  • Thread starter Thread starter Chronos
  • Start date Start date
  • Tags Tags
    State Universe
AI Thread Summary
The discussion highlights key issues in the standard cosmological model, referencing a paper that provides insights into both conceptual and technical aspects. Participants express interest in the empirical Hubble law and its implications for understanding luminosity distance and recession velocities. The role of dark matter in structure formation is emphasized, with some finding the arguments for its existence compelling. The conversation also touches on Big Bang nucleosynthesis (BBN) and the historical contributions of Fred Hoyle, particularly regarding the production of heavy elements. Overall, the thread reflects a deep engagement with unresolved questions and foundational theories in cosmology.
Chronos
Science Advisor
Gold Member
Messages
11,420
Reaction score
751
If interested in a current overview of the standard cosmological model try
http://arxiv.org/abs/astro-ph/0409280
This paper gives a mix of both the conceptual and technical foundations of modern theory and addresses a number of hot issues that remain unsolved. A good read for all levels of expertise.
 
Astronomy news on Phys.org
I didn't know the empirical Hubble law (equation 10):
z=H*L
where L is luminosity distance
although i knew the more familiar Hubble law
v=H*d
 
I didnt't know that either. It was quite interesting. One thing I found particularly interesting was the discussion on how DM broke free from the early universe and facilitated structure formation in the early universe. I have often been uneasy with dark matter, but, that makes a pretty compelling case for it.
 
Last edited:
meteor said:
I didn't know the empirical Hubble law (equation 10):
z=H*L
where L is luminosity distance
although i knew the more familiar Hubble law
v=H*d
z, of course, is what you measure from the spectra of distant objects; converting it to a 'recession speed' is simple, and (AFAIK) in the early days papers gave a 'recession velocity' (z came later). L and d are more subtle - as Maroto and Ramírez point out, "neither the recession velocities nor the physical emission distances to galaxies are empirically measurable"; what we actually observe is an apparent magnitude (luminosity), and we convert to a 'distance' from an estimated absolute magnitude (the 'standard candle').
 
The section treating BBN is quite interesting. It has cleared me some doubts that i had about the deuterium bottleneck, and is always great to remember how Hoyle solved the puzzle of the production of heavy elements with his "triple alpha process". Hoyle was a great astrophysicist. I'm afraid that his involvement in the Steady State model has always been like a dark shadow over his career
 
Nereid said:
z, of course, is what you measure from the spectra of distant objects; converting it to a 'recession speed' is simple, and (AFAIK) in the early days papers gave a 'recession velocity' (z came later). L and d are more subtle - as Maroto and Ramírez point out, "neither the recession velocities nor the physical emission distances to galaxies are empirically measurable"; what we actually observe is an apparent magnitude (luminosity), and we convert to a 'distance' from an estimated absolute magnitude (the 'standard candle').
When they give the redshift as a function of the scale factor, is this the same as saying that early photons had to climb out of a deeper gravitational well because the universe was more dense back then? I'm not sure whether they are assuming a linear relationship between redshift and distance. Thanks.
 
meteor said:
The section treating BBN is quite interesting. It has cleared me some doubts that i had about the deuterium bottleneck, and is always great to remember how Hoyle solved the puzzle of the production of heavy elements with his "triple alpha process". Hoyle was a great astrophysicist. I'm afraid that his involvement in the Steady State model has always been like a dark shadow over his career
Fred Hoyle was a fine physicist. His attachment to the steady state model was quite reasonable given the observational evidence at the time. I never considered that a stain on his reputation.
 
Back
Top