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Astronomy for Physical Science 112

Lesson 7: Cosmology and the expansion of the Universe

Key terms with links- Astronomy facts

Tahsiri: Lecture notes :

Kenealy: Read chapters (1-6).

Please click on the Virtual library www reference guides after the red arrow for further Discussions and Illustrations on the important terms relevant to my lectures.


Virtual library www Reference Guides

* Our galaxy is a huge, rotating disk-shaped group of stars that we see in the sky as the Milky Way from our location about two-thirds of the way out from the center. Most of the stars of the galaxy are found in two spiral arms that extend outward from the center. Spiral galaxies are other collections of stars that resemble our galaxy. The universe apparently consists of widely separated galaxies of stars.

a) Illustrations(1) The Milky Way Galaxy (2) The Milky Way (3) Galaxies (4) Exploring our Galaxy (5) The Hot Big Bang (6) A brief introduction to Universe (7) The nature of the Universe (8) The Big Bang model of the Universe. (9) The hot Big Bang model (10) The Big Bang (11) God, Genesis and the Big Bang (12) Closed and Open Model of the Universe (13) The Big Bang


* Tracing the observed motions of galaxies back in time implies that, about 15 billion years ago, the universe consisted of a single point that expanded rapidly in the Big Bang. Space itself was compressed to a point at that instant-the Big Bang happened everywhere at once. The cosmological redshift occurs as a
photon's wavelength is "stretched" by cosmic expansion. The extent of the observed redshift is a direct measure of the expansion of the universe since the photon was emitted. The spectral lines of distant galaxies show a doppler shift to the red arising from motion away from the earth. Since the speed of recession is observed to be proportional to distance, the red shift means that all the galaxies in the universe are moving away from one another. This expansion of the universe began about 15 billion years ago.

* The big bang theory holds that the universe originated in a great explosion about 15 billion years ago. Radiation left over from the big bang and doppler-shifted to radio frequencies has been detected. If the explosion was violent enough, the expansion of the universe will continue forever; if not, the universe will eventually begin to contract and will end up in a big crunch after which another cycle of expansion and contraction may occur. It is likely that the solar system originated as part of an evolutionary process, and that planetary systems are quite common elsewhere in the universe.

b) Illustrations(1) Expansion of the Universe (2) Doppler shift (3) The Expansion of the Universe (4) Hubble Expansion of the Universe (5) The Expanding Universe (6) Doppler shift (7) Hubble's Law and the Expansion of the Universe (8) Expansion of the Universe (9) Hubble's law and the Expanding Universe (10) Expansion of Universe simulation (11) Cosmology Tutorial (12) Expansion of Universe (13) Hubble's Law


* The cosmic microwave background is isotropic blackbody radiation that fills the entire universe. Its present temperature is about 3 K. Its existence is evidence that the universe expanded from a hot, dense state. As the universe has expanded, the initially high-energy radiation has been redshifted to lower and
lower temperatures.

c) Illustrations(1) The Cosmic Microwave Background Radiation (2) Frequently Asked Questions (3) Cosmic expansion


* Radio waves from space are produced by extremely hot gases, by fast electrons that move in magnetic fields and by atoms and molecules excited to radiate. Especially notable sources are quasars, distant objects that emit both light and radio waves strongly and that may be powered by supermassive black holes at their centers.

d) Illustrations(1) Radio Waves (2) What are radio waves? (3) Frequently Asked Questions About Quasars (4) Quasars (5) Quasars (6) Black Hole (7) Quasi Stellar Objects


* Cosmic rays are atomic nuclei, mostly protons, that travel through the galaxy at speed close to that of light. They probably were ejected during supernova explosions and are trapped in the galaxy by magnetic fields.

e) Illustrations(1) Cosmic Rays (2) Cosmic Rays (3) Cosmic Rays: What Are They? (4) Supernova Explosions (5) The Supernova Explosions


* Cosmological principle: In cosmology-the study of the universe as a whole assume that the universe is homogeneous and isotropic on large scales.

f) Illustrations(1) Cosmological Principles (2) Cosmological Principle


* Olbers's paradox: If the universe were homogeneous, isotropic, infinite, and unchanging, then the night sky would be bright
because any line of sight would eventually intercept a star. The fact that the night sky is instead dark is called Olbers's paradox.
Its resolution is that we see only a finite part of the universe-the region within about 15 billion light-years, beyond which light has not yet had time to reach us.

g) Illustrations(1) Olbers' Paradox and the Dark Night Sky (2) The darkness of the night sky (3) Olbers' Paradox


* The large-scale structure observed in the universe today formed when density inhomogeneities in the dark
matter clumped and grew to create the "skeleton" of the structure now observed. Normal matter then
flowed into the densest regions of space, eventually forming the galaxies we now see. "Ripples" in the
microwave background are the imprint of these early inhomogeneities on the radiation field.

h) Illustrations(1) Dark Matter (2) Dark Matter

 

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