1 / 40

The Big Bang Theory:

The Big Bang Theory:. Origin & Evolution of the Universe Su’dud Mayadmeh. Introduction. . Where did the Universe come from? Where is it going? How can we see the past? How can we learn about the future from seeing the past?. . . . Newton’s Static Universe.

lavey
Télécharger la présentation

The Big Bang Theory:

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. The Big Bang Theory: Origin & Evolution of the Universe Su’dudMayadmeh

  2. Introduction . Where did the Universe come from? Where is it going? How can we see the past? How can we learn about the future from seeing the past? . . .

  3. Newton’s Static Universe • Universe is static and composed of an infinite number of stars that are scattered randomly throughout an infinite space. • rseis infinitely old and will exist forever without any major changes. • Time and Space are steady and independent of one another and any objects in existence within them.

  4. Newton’s Error If universe is as how Newton describes, then why is the sky dark at night?

  5. Olber’s Paradox • If space goes on forever with stars scattered randomly throughout, then in any line of sight in any direction will eventually run into a star. • Using this logic, the sky should be the average brightness of all of these stars; the sky should be as bright as the sun, even at night.

  6. But isn’t the sky dark at night…? Yes, of course - that is what we observe now and have always observed. Something is wrong with Newton’s idea of a static, infinite universe.

  7. What is the Big Bang Theory? The universe started as a single point. That point was extremely dense. It became unstable and exploded outward. Today the universe continues to expand

  8. Time begins • The universe begins ~13.7 Billion years ago • The universe begins as the size of a single atom • The universe began as a violent expansion • All matter and space were created from a single point of pure energy in an instant

  9. ~ 3 minutes after big bang • The universe has grown from the size of an atom to larger than the size a grapefruit • E=mc2 • energy froze into matter according to Albert Einstein’s equation. • This basically says that like snowflakes freezing, energy forms matter into clumps that today we call protons, neutrons and electrons. • These parts later form into atoms

  10. The Doppler Effect

  11. Universal expansion and Hubble’s Law • Hubble observed the majority of galaxies are moving away from us and each other • The farther, the faster they move • Red Shift

  12. l - l observed rest Z = l rest Galactic Red shifts • Edwin Hubble (1889-1953) and colleagues • measured the spectra (light) of many galaxies • found nearly all galaxies are red-shifted • Redshift (Z) Andromeda galaxy (Doppler Effect) Z=V/C (For speed approaching C we’ll need a relativistic version Of this equation.) Z = [(1+ v/c)/(1+ v/c)]1/2 - 1

  13. Do you know what Red Shift is?

  14. Quasars & Cosmology Redshift In relativity the space between the galaxies is expanding. Department of Physics, Applied Physics & Astronomy, RPI

  15. Hubble’s Law • Galaxies are moving away from us. • The farther away the faster they go. • V = Ho x D v = recessional velocity of the galaxy H0 = Hubble constant D = distance of galaxy to earth

  16. Hubble’s Constant • Expansion rate measured using Type 1A Supernovae. • The age of the universe can be derived from Hubble’s constant: • T0 = d  T0 = 1 H0d H0 For example, if H0 = 73 km/s*Mpc, then T0 = 13.4 Billion years old

  17. Evidence for Expansion • The light from remote galaxies and other objects is red shifted. • This red shift is called cosmological red shiftbecause it is caused by the expansion of the universe, not by the actual movement of the object (dopplerred shift). If galaxies are all moving away, then at some point they were all much closer. Hubble’s Law implies the Universe is expanding.

  18. Three Pieces of Evidence Supporting the Big Bang

  19. Center of Universe? • There is NO CENTER to the universe • Expansion looks the same regardless of where you are in the universe. • Every point appears to be the center of the expansion, therefore no point is the center. • The universe is infinite.

  20. What Happens Next? • Astronomers feel that the Big Bang theory leads to two possible futures for the Universe.

  21. Open Universe Galaxies will continue racing outward (continue to expand). All of the stars will die off as the last of their energy is released. There will be nothing left, total emptiness ClosedUniverse Gravitational attraction between the galaxies will cause the movement away from each other to slow and, eventually come to a halt. The gravitational pull will begin to pull the galaxies back to the center of the universe

  22. The Shape of the Universe According to Einstein, mass bends space. This means that the universe has a shape. This shape is related to the density of the universe.

  23. Cosmic Background Radiation • Discovered in 1965 • Discovered by Arno Penzias & Robert Wilson • Their radio telescope detected faint radiation coming from all directions • Now believed to be leftover thermal energy from the big bang

  24. Cosmic Background Radiation (or CBR) George Gamow, Ralph Alpher and Robert Herman (1948) suggested that the Universe should have been filled with radiation shortly after the Big Bang. A remnant of this radiation should still be detectable today as low intensity background microwaves. • In an expanding Universe, the wavelength of radiation from the Big Bang would also expand, becoming red shifted and cooled. •  Therefore, we should be able to detect the red shifted cooled-off remnant of the Big Bang explosion all around us (pervading the entire Universe)! •  Furthermore, the remnant of the Big Bang explosion should have a blackbody spectrum.

  25. Not The End Just out of time

  26. LASTLY – we are pretty sure everything has a beginning, right?

  27. To be continue…

More Related