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mysearch
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While the title may suggest this thread belongs in cosmology, my questions are orientated towards a better understanding of general relativity. Basically, there seems to be an assumption that after the Big Bang, the initial expansion of the universe was slowed by gravity. Many sources appear to feel that this is so self-evident that no further explanation is usually given other than a possible passing reference to GR. Therefore, I was hoping that somebody might be able to outline the basic GR premise that supports this conclusion. However, I would like to initially try to link the discussion to 2 conceptual models:
- Model-1:
Assumes a large spherical volume of homogeneous density, radius=R, exists within an infinite and absolute vacuum. This homogeneous volume has an effective mass and a centre of gravity. The gravitational effects are assumed to align to the logic of http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shell_theorem" . As such:
- The force on an object (m) at radius=r>R, i.e. outside this volume, is subject to the normal inverse square law [1/r2] based on its distance [r] from the centre of the homogeneous volume.
- The force on an object (m) at radius=a<R, i.e. inside this volume, is now linearly proportional to [a], because the enclosed mass of the homogeneous volume itself is proportional to [a3]. The gravitational effect of the mass outside [a] is assumed to cancel out.
- The force on an object (m) at radius=r>R, i.e. outside this volume, is subject to the normal inverse square law [1/r2] based on its distance [r] from the centre of the homogeneous volume.
- Model-2:
Also assumes a homogeneous density, but now its volume conceptually extends to infinity. The logic of Newton’s Shells now appears problematic because it is difficult to resolve whether the object [m] has a near-zero or near-infinite radius as the centre cannot be determined.
- Model-1:
Anything outside the homogeneous volume would not be affected by its expansion, i.e. Birkhoff’s theorem (?). Anything inside, co-moving with an expansion, would also see [a] expand, but as the mass contained within [a] doesn’t change, the gravitational force would fall during expansion. While this model may appear homogeneous at [a], it might not be isotropic, although if the expansion rate was greater than the gravitational collapse this might be difficult to measure?
- Model-2:
Clearly, this is the one that appears to align to the standard cosmological model, at least, in its original form. While many of the details of this model are speculative, the original model assumed that nothing existed outside the universe; therefore any expansion of model-2 has to take place within the universe with no obvious centre of gravity.
- Model-1 seems to have a centre of gravity and, in the context of a weak gravitational field; it is assume that general relativity would converge towards the Newtonian interpretation?
- Model-2 doesn’t seem to have a centre of gravity; therefore it appears difficult to quantify the effects of gravity, other than as a local perturbation of the density. So is there a general explanation of how gravity acts on this model, as a whole, and slows its expansion; hopefully in a form that does not require a prerequisite, and in-depth, understanding of GR maths?
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