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clawsoon
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- Could the original temperature of the cosmic microwave background be deduced without a theory of a cooling universe? If we didn't know that the universe started hotter than 3000K, would we be able to tell that it was generated at 3000K and not 1000K?
Hi.
Could the original temperature of the cosmic microwave background be deduced without a theory of a cooling universe? I.e. if we didn't know that the universe started hotter than 3000K and cooled to below 3000K, would we be able to look at the CMB and say, "Yep, that was definitely originally generated at 3000K, and not at 2000K or 1000K"?
So far I've learned that blackbody radiation which has been redshifted has an identical distribution to blackbody radiation from a cooler source that hasn't been redshifted, so I'm guessing that the answer to my question is "no".
However, I do know of other examples where we can use the radiation itself to learn more about its origins. E.g., using spectral absorption lines you can figure out how fast something is moving away from you even if you don't have a theory of an expanding universe by comparing those lines to what you get in the lab. Or with Cepheid variable stars you can figure out the absolute brightness of a star even if you don't have a theory of star formation by comparing its period to the period of nearby Cepheids whose distance you've measured via parallax. Is there any equivalent for CMB (or blackbody radiation in general) where you can figure out the original temperature even if you don't have a theory of universe formation?
Apologies if this has been asked before; a few hours of searching around the web hasn't turned up an answer, so I hope it's a fresh-ish question.
Could the original temperature of the cosmic microwave background be deduced without a theory of a cooling universe? I.e. if we didn't know that the universe started hotter than 3000K and cooled to below 3000K, would we be able to look at the CMB and say, "Yep, that was definitely originally generated at 3000K, and not at 2000K or 1000K"?
So far I've learned that blackbody radiation which has been redshifted has an identical distribution to blackbody radiation from a cooler source that hasn't been redshifted, so I'm guessing that the answer to my question is "no".
However, I do know of other examples where we can use the radiation itself to learn more about its origins. E.g., using spectral absorption lines you can figure out how fast something is moving away from you even if you don't have a theory of an expanding universe by comparing those lines to what you get in the lab. Or with Cepheid variable stars you can figure out the absolute brightness of a star even if you don't have a theory of star formation by comparing its period to the period of nearby Cepheids whose distance you've measured via parallax. Is there any equivalent for CMB (or blackbody radiation in general) where you can figure out the original temperature even if you don't have a theory of universe formation?
Apologies if this has been asked before; a few hours of searching around the web hasn't turned up an answer, so I hope it's a fresh-ish question.