T2: 4. Cosmology Flashcards

1
Q

Define isotropy

A

There is no preferred direction in space; the universe looks the same from all angles. (Idea of spherical symmetry)

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2
Q

Define Homogeneity (in space)

A

The universe is the same at all spacial points; i.e. given two spacial points, transformations between them leaves the metric invariant

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3
Q

State the Copernican principle

A

Space is isotropic and homogeneous

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4
Q

What does homogeneous and isotropic impart on the spatial part of the metric?

A

H. The time component can have have no spacial dependence: time must behave the same at all points in space.

I. There are no time, space cross terms; there cannot be a preferred direction.

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5
Q

State the Hubble constant H_0

A

H_0 = a^dot (t_1)/a(t_1)

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6
Q

State the three values of κ and what kind of universe they correspond to

A

κ =
0 - flat space
1 - closed universe (sphere s3)
-1 - open universe (hyperbolic)

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7
Q

What form does the equation of state take?

A

p=ωρ

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8
Q

What values do p and ω take for matter?

A

p = 0
ω = 0

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9
Q

What values do p and ω take for radiation?

A

p=ρ/3
ω = 1/3

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10
Q

What values do p and ω take for vacuum?

A

p=-ρ
ω =-1

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11
Q

State the Friedmann equation

A

(a^dot/ a)^2 + κ/a^2 = (8πG/3) ρ

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12
Q

State the Raychaudri equation

A

(a^ddot/ a) = -(4πG/3) (ρ+3p)

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13
Q

State the conservation equation

A

ρ^dot + 3(a^dot/ a)(ρ+p) = 0

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14
Q

What condition does homogeneity impart on the metric?

A

Constant Ricci scalar

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15
Q

What constant value does the Ricci scalar take on in FRW metric?

A

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16
Q

How is the metric/Ricci tensor/Ricci scalar affected by a positive scalar?

A

scaled by λ; unchanged; scaled by λ^-1

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17
Q

What is the general spacial metric for homogeneous, isotropic manifolds?

A

dσ^2 = (dr^2)/(1-κr^2 ) + r^2 dΩ^2

18
Q

What is the general spacial metric for homogeneous, isotropic manifolds?

A

dσ^2 = (dr^2)/(1-κr^2 ) + r^2 dΩ^2

19
Q

What spacial geometry does a closed universe have? Describe it?

A

Three-sphere, parameterised by (χ,θ,ϕ). For each χ ∈ [0,π] there is a two-sphere. The two spheres get bigger til π/2 and then smaller.

Positive curvature

20
Q

What coordinate transformations do we use for a closed universe?

A

χ = sin^-1(r)

dχ = dr/sqrt(1-r^2)

21
Q

What spacial geometry does an open universe have? Describe it?

A

Negatively curved manifold; a hyperbolic space parameterised by (χ,θ,ϕ). For each χ∈[0,∞) there is a two-sphere, however they keep getting bigger to ∞.

22
Q

What coordinate transformations do we use for an open universe?

A

χ = sinh(r)

dχ = dr/sqrt(1+r^2)

23
Q

A maximally symmetric space in d dimensions has how many killing vectors?

A

N_d = d(d+1)/2

24
Q

Define comoving observers

A

Observers that are at rest with respect to spacial coordinates; still moving through time.

25
Q

What is the ratio of time interval to scale factor for cosmological redshift?

A

a(t_2)/a(t_1) = Δt_2/Δt_1

26
Q

Give the formula for cosmological redshift parameter z

A

z = Δt_2/Δt_1 -1

27
Q

How does the parameter z relate to how much a object has been redshifted?

A

More z implies more redshift since the receiving interval has increased.

28
Q

For a small t_2 - t_1, what is the instantaneous distance between observers

A

a(t_1)r_1

29
Q

Define the Hubble constant H_0

A

The ratio of a^dot (t_1)/a(t_1) at present

30
Q

Given a small distance between observers, give the redshift formula

A

z ≈ H_0 d

where d = t_2 - t_1

31
Q

How do we find the Friedmann and Raychaudhuri equations?

A

Friedmann: R_tt part of Ricci tensor

Raychaudri: R_ij part of Ricci tensor (all proportional, find R_θθ)

32
Q

How do we find the conservation equation from Freidmann and Raychaudhuri?

A

Multiply Friedmann by a^2 and take time derivative. Eliminate a^ddot with raychauduri.

33
Q

Why is the conservation equation so-called?

A

It is analogous to writing ∇_μ T^μν = 0: the conservation of the stress tensor.

34
Q

What does finding a reverse chain rule on continuity tell us?

A

ρ ~ ρ_0/(a^3(1+w))

35
Q

How does density dilute for matter and radiation universes?

A

Matter: ρ ~ ρ_0/a^3

Radiation: ρ ~ ρ_0/a^4

36
Q

How does density dilute for a vacuum universe? What does this tell us about the Friedmann eq?

A

It remains constant. We add an extra term to the RHS of sol Friedmann Λ/3 and take density as a func of a.

37
Q

How do scale factors for matter/radiation, and vacuum domination differ?

A

Matter/radiation increases (and for k=1 decreases) polynomialy; vacuum increases exponentially

38
Q

How do we define dimensionless density parameters?

A

Take the Friedmann eq with a little matter, radiation and cosmological constant. Divide by H^2 and notice each term must equal 1.

39
Q

What does the sign of the density parameter Ω indicate about our universe

A

Ω > 1 → κ=1 : closed

Ω = 1 → κ=0 : flat space

Ω < 1 → κ=-1 : open

40
Q

What is dark matter? How did we find it?

A

An undetected particle that does not give off ordinary light. It makes us for the discrepancy between predicted and observed matter density.

41
Q

Give a speedy timeline of l’universe

A

Big bang → radiation domination → matter domination (w/recombination) → vacuum domination