A team of rocket scientists at the University of Wisconsin-Madison's Space Astro...
Dr. Mahima Kundu covers the basics of Astronomy in this 10 minute video.
TEST lecture
Introduction to Astrophysics
Will an asteroid strike the Earth and wipe out all life as we know it? IR-2 and ...
physicians |
(60%) (1 Vote)
|
Views: (4393) Date: (14-04-09) Time: (00:03:05) |
Description:
Everything you ever wanted to know about the expansion of the universe but were afraid to ask!
Until well into this century, it was not understood whether the great groupings of stars that were seen through telescopes were part of our own galaxy, or distant galaxies in their own right. This puzzle was finally resolved by using Cepheid variables to establish a distance to the objects like the "spiral nebula" in the constellation Andromeda, and to determine the size of our own galaxy. By around 1925, Hubble, Leavitt, Hertsprung, Shapley, and others had established conclusively that objects like the Andromeda "Nebula" were in fact much further away than objects in our own galaxy and thus were themselves galaxies.
The Expansion of the Universe
Then, in the late 1920's, Hubble, building on results obtained earlier by Slipher, combined Doppler shift measurements of radial velocities with distance measurements to conclude that almost all galaxies were flying away from the Milky Way, and that the velocity of recession was proportional to the distance from us: the further the galaxy from us, the faster it was receding.
It later turned out that there were systematic errors in the earliest measurements, associated primarily with a failure to realize that there were two kinds of Cepheids, failure to disguish in some cases Cepheid and RR-Lyra variables, and failure to account for the scattering of starlight by interstellar dust. However, although corrections for these mistakes changed the distance scales by as much as factors of two, they did not alter the fundamental conclusions:
1. There are many galaxies outside of our own.
2. These galaxies are all receding from us if we go to large enough distances.
3. The velocity of recession is proportional to the distance from us.
Olber's Paradox
That the Universe is not static but expanding helps solve a paradox that has been known at least since the 1500s but that was popularized by Heinrich Olbers in 1826 and has come to be known as Olber's Paradox. Briefly, if the Universe is static and uniformly filled with stars and galaxies, one can show that the night sky should be as bright as the surface of a star. That this is not so constitutes the paradox. The expansion of the Universe solves this problem, as is discussed nicely in this reference.
The Distant Galaxies are Flying Away from Us
The galaxies are all flying apart (on very large distance scales), with the velocity of recession proportional to the distance between them. The adjacent image, taken by the Wide-Field and Planetary Camera (WFPC2) of the Hubble Space Telescope, shows many galaxies billions of light years away. Most of the fuzzy patches are galaxies containing billions of stars; click on the image to get a larger version. The galaxies in this image are receding from us at high velocities.
The details of this expansion are dictated by the value of the Hubble Constant. The objects furthest away from us appear to be receding at near the velocity of light. This expansion of the universe is a result of the original explosion that created the universe-the big bang. The big bang did not happen in space and in time; our modern understanding is that space and time as we presently experience them are themselves created in the big bang. Therefore, it makes no more sense to ask what was before the big bang than to ask what is north of the north pole.
Here is a Java applet (written by someone else) that can be used to illustrate the Hubble Law. However, the reader is warned that it is very slow loading and may not run properly if you do not have the latest browser.
A Two Dimensional Analogy
The Universe has 3 spatial dimensions, but it is easier to visualize an analogy to its expansion for the 2-dimensional surface of a balloon. There is no center. If you stand on any galaxy, all the others will appear to be moving away from you with a velocity proportional to the distance from you. An analogy in 2 dimensions is to put dots on the surface of a balloon and blow the balloon up. As it expands, there is no dot that is the "center", but if you stand on any dot you will see all other dots moving away from you (and the rate at which they move away will be proportional to the distance. Dots close to you will be moving away slower than those further away). The expansion of the Universe appears to be like this, but in 3 rather than 2 space dimensions, which makes it much harder to visualize, but it is possible to describe it mathematically.
Comoving Coordinates
It is often simpler to discuss things happening in the expansion of the Universe if we adopt a vantage point that is moving uniformly with the expansion. Astronomers call such a vantage point a comoving coordinate system. The balloon analogy in 2 dimensions illustrates simply the idea of comoving coordinates. If instead of viewing the expansion of the balloon from the outside I place myself on one of the dots on the balloon's surface, I appear to be stationary and I see the other dots moving away from me (and in my immediate area I see the apparent curvature of the balloon's surface decreasing). Astronomers will also often speak (in 3 dimensional space) of a comoving volume. This means a volume of space that is moving uniformly with the expansion.
Illustration of Comoving Coordinates in 2 Dimensions
Here are two MPEG movies illustrating the formation of structure in the Universe that illustrate the difference between viewing the surface of a balloon from outside or from comoving coordinates on its surface:
* Case 1: 2-dimensional expanding surface from outside.
* Case 2: 2-dimensional expanding surface from comoving coordinates
SOURCE: http://csep10.phys.utk.edu/astr162/lect/cosmology/expansion.html
The Universe ( as a whole ) is Two- Measured,
there are two Worlds: Vacuum and Gravity.
What was before Vacuum or Gravity ?
Does Gravity exist in Vacuum or vice versa?
== .
Fact and Speculation.
1.
Fact.
The detected material mass of the matter in the Universe is so small
(the average density of all substance in the Universe is approximately
p=10^-30 g/sm^3) that it cannot ‘close’ the Universe into sphere and
therefore our Universe as whole is ‘open’, endless Vacuum.
But what to do with the infinite Universe the physicists don't know.
The concept of infinite/ eternal means nothing
to a scientists. They do not understand how they could
draw any real, concrete conclusions from this characteristic.
A notions of ‘more, less, equally, similar ’ could not
be conformed to a word infinity or eternity.
The Infinity / Eternity is something, that has no borders,
has no discontinuity; it could not be compared to anything.
Considering so, scientists came to conclusion that the
infinity/eternity defies to a physical and mathematical definition
and cannot be considered in real processes.
Therefore they have proclaimed the strict requirement
(on a level of censor of the law):
« If we want that the theory would be correct,
the infinity/eternity should be eliminated » .
Thus they direct all their mathematical abilities,
all intellectual energy to the elimination of infinity.
Therefore they invented an abstract ‘dark matter and dark energy’.
They say: ‘ 90% or more of the matter in the Universe is unseen.’
And nobody knows what it is.
2.
Speculation.
Unknown ‘dark matter ‘ it is matter which makes up the difference
between observed mass of a galaxies and calculated mass……
which….will …’close ‘ ….the Universe into sphere, as …….
as……the astrophysicists want.
Question:
How can the 99% of the Hidden ( dark ) matter in the Universe
create the 1% of the Visible matter ?
========================== . .
#
Now it is considered that Newton / Einstein's laws
of gravitation are basis of physics, the first laws of Universe.
But the detected material mass of the matter in the Universe
is so small that gravitation field, as whole, doesn't work
in the Universe.
So, the Newton / Einstein's laws of gravitation are correct only
in the small and local part of Universe and we cannot take them
as the first ones.
What can the first law of the Universe be?
All galaxies , all gravitation fields exist in Vacuum (T=0K).
Gravitational effects took place only in a small area of Infinite Vacuum.
It is impossible to use GRT to the Universe as a whole.
Vacuum is “ The first law of the Universe.â€
The Physics is first of all Vacuum.
Vacuum is the Source of the Universe .
Vacuum is the Absolute Reference Frame.
Without Eternal and Infinite Vacuum Physics makes no sense.
========== . .
Israel Socratus.