The expansion of the universe is the increase in distance between any two given gravitationally unbound parts of the observable universe with time. It is an intrinsic expansion whereby the scale of space itself changes. The universe does not expand "into" anything and does not require space to exist "outside" it. Technically, neither space nor objects in space move. Instead it is the metric governing the size and geometry of spacetime itself that changes in scale. As the spatial part of the universe's spacetime metric increases in scale, objects move apart from one another at ever-increasing speeds. To any observer in the universe, it appears that all of space is expanding while all but the nearest galaxies recede at speeds that are proportional to their distance from the observer – at great enough distances the speeds exceed even the speed of light.As an effect of general relativity, the expansion of the universe is different from the expansions and explosions seen in daily life. It is a property of the universe as a whole rather than a phenomenon that applies just to one part of the universe and, unlike other expansions and explosions, cannot be observed from "outside" of it.
Metric expansion is a key feature of Big Bang cosmology, is modeled mathematically with the Friedmann–Lemaître–Robertson–Walker metric and is a generic property of the universe we inhabit. However, the model is valid only on large scales (roughly the scale of galaxy clusters and above), because gravity binds matter together strongly enough that metric expansion cannot be observed on a smaller scale at this time. As such, the only galaxies receding from one another as a result of metric expansion are those separated by cosmologically relevant scales larger than the length scales associated with the gravitational collapse that are possible in the age of the universe given the matter density and average expansion rate. To paraphrase, the metric is forecasted to eventually begin to outpace the gravity that bodies require to remain bound together, meaning all but the most local bound groups will recede.
According to inflation theory, during the inflationary epoch about 10−32 of a second after the Big Bang, the universe suddenly expanded, and its volume increased by a factor of at least 1078 (an expansion of distance by a factor of at least 1026 in each of the three dimensions), equivalent to expanding an object 1 nanometer (10−9 m, about half the width of a molecule of DNA) in length to one approximately 10.6 light years (about 1017 m or 62 trillion miles) long. A much slower and gradual expansion of space continued after this, until at around 9.8 billion years after the Big Bang (4 billion years ago) it began to gradually expand more quickly, and is still doing so. Physicists have postulated the existence of dark energy, appearing as a cosmological constant in the simplest gravitational models, as a way to explain this late-time acceleration. According to the simplest extrapolation of the currently-favored cosmological model, the Lambda-CDM model, this acceleration becomes more dominant into the future. In June 2016, NASA and ESA scientists reported that the universe was found to be expanding 5% to 9% faster than thought earlier, based on studies using the Hubble Space Telescope.
If space is expanding like balloon and it disappears wrinkles on surface than after sometimes surface will become smooth and expansion will stop and if we further try to expand the universe than surface will tear apart like balloon's surface.Is it true??
I am hoping that someone with broad knowledge of the physics literature can tell me when in the past tests were done on light coming from galaxies billions of light years away, tests that over time counted a decreasing number of photons from a single galaxy, or an increase in the wavelength of...
What I think I know:
1. universe is expanding (from red shift observation?)
2. expansion is accelerating; farther galaxies move away at faster rate than nearer galaxies.
3. expansion rate will exceed speed of light
4. observable universe will be a lonely, dark place.
Question:
1. how can...
A hypothesis only by James Leckner
Looking at space as a form of energy itself or as another way that energy is converted from one form to another. You would look at space as not the result of a large explosion (per say) but more like the conversion of one form of energy to another or even...
Homework Statement
What's the doppler shift (Δf) of the object moving away from us if we measure a wavelength of light λ=1.55μm emitted from it and it's at a distance of 10 megaparsecs? And is the object red or blue shifted?
Added information to the problem is for each megaparsec the object...
I once asked a physicist to explain what the universe expands into, and he gave me the analogy of raisins in bread dough. That the raisins represents galaxies, galactic clusters, etc...and as the universe (bread dough) expands, the galaxies (raisins) move apart. But this analogy assumes that the...
Apparently the generaly accepted interpretation is that the expansion is speeding up, mainly by observing the redgarbageing of supernovae of distant galaxies and establishing their distance and redshifting indicating the speed at which they are moving away from us.
The further away the faster...
Imagine a standard ruler (made of atoms) at the present epoch.
Assume its comoving length is dx=x_1 - x_2 where x_1 and x_2 are the comoving coordinates of its ends at the present time.
As the scale factor a=1 then its proper length ds=a \ dx is equal to its comoving length dx.
Now imagine...
If light travels a metre in a unit of cosmological time now will it travel two metres in the same cosmological time interval when the universe has expanded to twice its present size?
Hey
I'm 16 and currently studying my last year of physics in high school. I have to write an extended research task on a topic relating directly or indirectly to astrophysics. I have chosen to do the static universe theory vs the expanding universe theory. I've been researching as of late and...
Okay, here's my problem. I've recently read that physicists believe that all the mass and dark energy in the universe do indeed add up to the critical density, which means that the universe will continue to expand forever, at zero curvature, and is either finite (like a torus) or infinite. And...
I have heard people say there is no center to the expansion of the universe. I have also heard the expansion described as an ever expanding balloon with all galaxies as dots on the surface. These to statements seem contradictorily to me.
If the expansion of the universe was like the above...
Okay, so people say the universe is expanding like a 3 dimensional balloon. Now in the 2 dimensional balloon representation, it is curved so you will eventually end up in the same spot if you went in a "straight line" across its surface, like a planet. People also say that the universe most...
Another question for you all. What evidence for an expanding universe is there besides redshift. I am a layman and to me it seems like it would be simpler to find another explanation for the spectral shift of light as it passes through millions of light years of space (say some kind of lensing...
Reading popular books (written by Hawking, Penrose, Greene, Linde, Guth and certainly many more) one finds numerous statements like
entropy was low after the big bang ... Weyl-curvature hypothesis ... entropy increases with time ... black holes violate unitarity and therefore entropy or phase...
The idea of an expanding universe is said to be proven by using the calculated distance of a Cepheid star from us, and the amount of change in the wavelengths of light emitted from the Cepheid star relative to us.
There must be another way to prove the universe is expanding since the...
I know that the Hubble constant proves this and scientist have done plenty of research on this topic.
Today in my philosophy class we came about the topic of the universe expanding and the philosophy teacher and I were going back and forth on the subject of "How do you really know the...
Basically, all more distant galaxies have a Red Shift that increases with the distance to the galaxy, the Universe is expanding.
1) If there are other pieces of evidence that indicate the Universe is expanding, what are they?
2) Any internet links describing exactly how the other...
From answers given to me here and elsewhere, I finally got a (what I think should be the right) answer to the problem:
Suppose that the universe were expanding in such a way that two planets were receding from each other at a constant speed of 1.1c (or, in other words, their distance would...
OK, a couple of things.
1. I know there are a few theories of "why" gravity exists with gravitons and entropy, etc. But know one really knows.
Does anyone have any good websites where all theories are discussed in one section? I am having to go all over the place to find information...
If you take it to its extremes and space continues to expand at an accelerated rate, what happens when?
1) space is expanding so fast that virtual particles cannot annihilate.
2) if the space between quarks ends up expanding then the energy needed to pull them apart will spawn new quarks...
Dear all,
I just read a great question on TED.com, however I think people over here could answer this question perhaps better.
"If the universe is expanding - what is it expanding into?
what is THAT space called
and why isn't it part of the universe now?"
I am curious about the expanding universe - that is, that the space itself is expanding. Why can't we notice the effects of an expanding universe here in our own solar system? Why doesn't space expand here around us? Wouldn't this result in more space between our molecules and so on until we...
I am only a beginner in physics and have been reading popular books.
I read that the average mass-energy density of the universe determines its shape such as having uniform positive curvature, uniform negative curvature, or zero curvature if it equals the critical density. However, if spacetime...
Hello,
I am hoping someone can help me to understand that the universe is expanding and other questions that brings up. If it is expanding, does that mean that there is an edge or a place that the universe has not reached yet but will reach at some point? What would be in the space that it...
How do we know that the universe is more like raisin bread baking and not like all matter and energy leaving a central point?
I somewhat understand the concept of space increasing rather than matter and energy just leaving the big bang, just wondering what evidence we have of this?
So from my understanding SR loosely tells us that time is not constant and that depending on our motion relative to another observer will dictate our differences in rate of time. I was wondering what SR tells us about the expanding universe. In cosmology we're taught that the universe is...
Some background: I am a senior in high school taking astronomy, so admittedly i do not know much about the structure and physics of the universe. However this is something that I've come up with on my own. I spend a lot of time just thinking about the universe, and this is one thing that just...
Assume that we have a particle i at rest according to co-moving coordinates.
Then the total energy of the particle at rest, E_i, is its rest mass energy plus the sum of the (negative) gravitational potential energies between it and every other particle in the Universe. Thus we have
\large...
Hi,
I wonder what people think of the following mechanism for matter creation in an expanding Universe.
Imagine a particle-antiparticle pair coming into existence from the vacuum.
As I understand it, they will annihilate each other in the time that a light signal takes to travel from one...
Is our 3-dimensional space expanding because it is the "skin" of a higher dimensional space which is expanding? Is that why there seems to be no point of origin for the big bang?
At first, people thought the universe was stationary. This seemed logical, why would any object tend to move in one direction or the other if there was the same amount of mass in all directions? Then they noticed the redshift of distant galaxies and concluded that the universe must be expanding...
First let me start by saying thank you for taking the time to read this. On watching a program on the bbc relating to black holes and the comparison to a waterfall it got me thinking if matter was to fall through a black hole and be supper heated as it reaches the center if this is the case why...
As I understand it, the universe is approx. 14 billion years old. Light from the farthest observed galaxies took several million or billion years to reach us. Now my question is: If it takes for example, 500 million years for light from a certain galaxy to reach us it is 500 million light years...
Hello,
Let me first start off by saying that I have no formal Education or background in Physics or Astronomy save for one course during college. This is simply posing an idea I had while reading an article on the acceleration of the expanding universe and how it could have a correlation with...
I am under the impression that the slowing of light over time would make the universe appear to be expanding. Is it possible that the permittivity or permeability of space has been decreasing over time giving the illusion of an expanding universe?
Is there any way to test the differences and...
My question may be stupid, but as we look out into the universe aren't we seeing into the past? For instance let's say we are looking at a group of stars and they are 3 million light yrs away and moving away from us. Aren't they just moving away from us at that moment? Like the stars on the edge...
The other day I saw Michio Kaku saying scientists now think that the universe "may have" started from being puked out by a black hole from another universe. If this is correct could the answer to the question " why is the universe still expanding" be " It is still expanding because the said...
According to Misconceptions about the Big Bang in Scientific American by Charles H. Lineweaver and Tamara M. Davis, space-time is expanding and carrying galaxies with it, rather than galaxies being moved ever faster and further into space-time. See...
I have a question, but I'm a neophyte so please correct my premise if it is wrong. If it is true that in an expanding universe the space between any 2 points increases than wouldn't it be true that the space between the end points of a measuring rod (e.g. a light year, or more fundamentally a...
I have read a few threads on here and acknowledge i am way out of my depth. Bearing in mind my limited knowledge can someone explain to me how we can say the universe is expanding now. the logic seems reversed to me. I've heard it as the furthest away galaxies are receding from us at the...
After reading about the expanding universe, and the balloon analogy, I found myself wondering about some things. Like many in these forums, I found it difficult to get my head around the concepts. At first I wondered, if space is expanding, and the distance between galaxies is increasing, then...
Hi All,
I'm a newbie here and I don't know enough about physics to answer my question, so I will submit what I think I know to be true, then pose some questions, therefore please pardon any allowable mistakes.
1) Time is immaterial for my purposes in this posting, at least in a...
My question/thought is this...
We know gravity is related to matter, could dark matter have "anti-gravity"
Just like magnets have different polarities, one to attract and one to repel, could gravity have similar properties that we are unable to identify, perhaps related to types of matter...
If our universe is indeed expanding, would this have an effect on spacetime? For example as space and time are related, if I change one, shouldn’t it have an effect on the other?
Also, wouldn’t it make gravity weaker as it is stretching space?
i've seen many documentaries. most recently nova had one on the expanding universe which prompted me to send them (nova@wgbh.org) the following:
based on the nova shows I've seen, they suggest the universe is expanding.
farther objects are observed as moving away faster than closer objects...
I know this is probably a stupid question but I was wondering, with two frames that are moving wrt to each other, it is valid to say that ‘A’ is moving from ‘B’ OR that ‘B’ is moving from ‘A’
However with the expanding universe, I can say that all other frames are moving away from me, but I...
Hello;
Please forgive me if this is a silly question, or if it's been answered before. I have tried googling this, but I can't find the information I need, I've probably overlooked it, but I can't find it.
I recall a quotation by Lawrence Krauss who said in a talk that "from the inside...
New to cosmology, please go easy on me. ;)
1. REFRACTIVE INDEX
"It is generally accepted that the speed of light in a vacuum is not dependent on its frequency (color)."
http://accessscience.com/studycenter.aspx?main=17&questionID=3781
2. IS SPACE A VACUUM?
"Outer space (often simply called...
Dear All
As I have understood, there will be only cooling chunks of matter like stray planets, neutron stars, brown dwarves and all other kind of debris left of our Universe in 10^20 years, which continue drifting apart as the Universe expands on (let us assume that it does). They will...