Big
bang theory
Approximately
13.7 billion years ago, the entirety of our
universe was compressed into the confines of an atomic nucleus. Known as a
singularity, this is the moment before creation when space and time did not
exist. According to the prevailing cosmological models that explain our
universe, an ineffable explosion, trillions of degrees in temperature on any
measurement scale, that was infinitely dense, created not only fundamental
subatomic particles and thus matter and energy but space and time itself.
Cosmology theorists combined with the observations of their astronomy
colleagues have been able to reconstruct the primordial chronology of events
known as the big bang.
Quantum theory suggests that
moments after the explosion at 10 -43 second, the four forces of nature; strong
nuclear, weak nuclear, electromagnetic and gravity were combined as a single
"super force"(Wald). Elementary particles known as quarks begin to
bond in trios, forming photons, positrons and neutrinos and were created along
with their antiparticles. There are minuscule amounts of protons and neutrons
at this stage; approximately 1 for every one billion photons, neutrinos or
electrons (Maffei). The density of the Universe in its first moment of life is
thought to have been 1094g/cm3
with the majority of this being radiation. For each
billion pairs of these heavy particles (hadrons) that were created, one was
spared annihilation due to particle-antiparticle collisions. The remaining
particles constitute the majority of our universe today (Novikov).
During this creation and annihilation
of particles the universe was undergoing a rate of expansion many times the
speed of light. Known as the inflationary epoch, the universe in less than one
thousandth of a second doubled in size at least one hundred times, from an
atomic nucleus to 1035 meters in width. An isotropic inflation of our Universe
ends at 10-35 second that was almost perfectly smooth. If it were not for a
slight fluctuation in the density distribution of matter, theorists contend,
galaxies would have been unable to form (Parker).
The universe at this point was
an ionized plasma where matter and radiation were inseparable. Additionally
there were equal amounts of particles and antiparticles. The ratio of neutrons
and protons albeit small is equal. When the universe aged to one hundredth of a
second old neutrons begin to decay on a massive scale. This allows for free
electrons and protons to combine with other particles. Eventually the remaining
neutrons combine with protons to form heavy hydrogen (deuterium). These
deuterium nuclei combine in pairs and form helium nuclei. The formation of
matter from energy is made possible by photons materializing into baryons and
antibaryons with their subsequent annihilations transforming them into pure
energy (Maffei). Because of these collisions and annihilations matter was
unable to remain viable for more than a few nanoseconds before a bombardment of
electrons would scatter these photons. Like water trapped inside a sponge,
radiation is so dense (1014g/cm3) that no light is visible. Known as the "Epoch of Last
Scattering" the temperature has now dropped to a mere 1013K with the
Strong Nuclear, Weak Nuclear and Electromagnetic interactions now able to exert
their force. (Chown)
As the gas cloud expands one
full second after the initial explosion and the temperature of our Universe has
dropped to ten billion degrees, photons no longer have the energy to disrupt
the creation of matter as well as transform energy into matter. After three
minutes and a temperature of one billion degrees, protons and neutrons were
slowing down enough in order to allow nucleosynthesis to take place. Atomic
nuclei of helium was produced as two protons and neutrons each bonded. For
every helium nuclei formed there were about ten protons left over allowing for
twenty-five percent of the Universe to be comprised of helium. The next
important phase of the expansion occurred around thirty minutes later when the
creation of photons increased through the annihilation of electron-positron
pairs. The fact that the universe began with slightly more electrons than
positrons has insured that our Universe was able to form the way it has
(Parker).
The universe for the next
300,000 years will then begin to expand and cool to a temperature of 10,000°K.
These conditions allowed for helium nuclei to absorb free floating electrons
and form helium atoms. Meanwhile hydrogen atoms were bonding together and
forming lithium. It is here that the density of the universe has expanded to
the point where light can be perceived. Until this point photons continued to
be trapped within matter. Finally the expansion allowed for light and matter to
go there separate ways as radiation becomes less and less dense. Matter and
radiation therefore too, were bonded no longer and the oldest fossils in the Universe
were born (Peebles).
In 1814 the science of
spectroscopy was launched by William Wollaston, an English physicist who
noticed that there were several dark lines that separated the continuous
spectrum of the Sun. These lines came to the attention of Joseph von
Fraunhofer, a German optician and physicist who carefully plotted the position
of those lines. Then in 1850 German physicist's Gustav Kirchhoff and Robert
Bunsen refined the spectroscope. They then learned to heat different elements
to incandescence and using the spectroscope identified an elements
corresponding lines on the visible portion of the electromagnetic
spectrum(Parker).
In 1863 Sir William Huggins, an
amateur astronomer viewed a nearby star through his 8 inch refractor with a
spectroscope attached. He found what he had originally hypothesized, the same
spectrum lines that were observed in our own Sun. Meanwhile, Kirchhoff and
Bunsen had successfully categorized the spectrum lines of many elements
including those of hydrogen, sodium and magnesium. Huggins found these same
spectrum lines in the distant stars he had observed and correctly predicted
that some of the same elements that Kirchhoff and Bunsen were cataloging were
emanating from these celestial bodies (Parker).
Christian Doppler of Austria
discovered twenty years earlier that the frequency of a sound wave was
dependent on the relative position of the source of the sound. As a sound moves
away from an observer the pitch will lower. Likewise if the source is not
moving but the observer is, there will be a corresponding change in the wave
frequency of the sound. Doppler theorized on this same shift for light waves
yet it was the French physicist Armand Fizeau who proved in 1848 that when a
celestial object moves away from an observer, the lines in the visible spectrum
would shift toward the red end. Conversely, when an object moves toward the
observer, Fizeau found that the lines in the spectrum shifted toward the blue
end. Huggins observed a shift in the hydrogen lines of Sirius toward the red
end of the spectrum. This "redshift" indicated that Sirius was moving
away from us. A few years later he was able to calculate the radial velocity of
the star Sirius at between 26 to 36 miles per second (Parker).
During the 1890's the Lick
Observatory in California began to track and chart the radial velocity (which
is actually the velocity at which the line of sight that the star is observed)
of many stars, as well as gaseous and planetary nebulae. Astronomers at Lick
calculated the measurements of 400 stars including their radial speed and
velocity. In 1910 Vesto Slipher measured the velocity of the Andromeda Nebula
at 300 km per second, thirty times greater than previously observed. Four years
later, Slipher had confirmed the radial velocities of 14 spiral nebula, with
the overwhelming majority shifting to the red end of the spectrum. Slipper's
observations showed that the majority of spirals he measured were moving away
from us (Parker).
Around 1913 several astronomers,
among them Edwin Hubble, used a variable star known as a Cepheid (a star that
fluctuates in intensity) to measure their period-luminosity relationship. This
would accurately determine the distance to any Cepheid in the observable
vicinity. Hubble became the first astronomer to discover an independent galaxy
outside the confines of the Milky Way. Hubble calculated the distance of the
Andromeda Galaxy to be 900,000 light years away; larger than the predicted size
of our own galaxy. Using the radial velocity measurements of Slipher along with
Hubble's own calculations he began to notice a correlation between the distance
of these galaxies and their radial velocities. The proof was conclusive: the
further away a galaxy was relative to the Earth, the greater the velocity of
that galaxy. Hubble had irrefutable proof that the Universe was expanding. By
1936 Hubble had received data from galaxies more than 100 million light years
away. The redshifts at this distance were so large that the spectral lines had
changed color (Weinberg).
As astronomers were collecting
data on the Universe based on their observations, theorists were busy
developing models that attempted to explain the cosmos. Recently equipped with
Albert Einstein's Theory of Relativity, Einstein was one of the first to
attempt an explanation of the physical Universe. Einstein believed the Universe
to have a static, uniform, isotropic distribution of matter. Einstein's own
calculations however proved to result in the exact opposite, an oscillating
universe that had the potential for expansion or contraction. He was certain
that the universe was stable. Einstein was compelled to amend his original
equation. He used the term cosmological constant, which created a spherical,
four-dimensional closed universe (Parker).
Around the same time the Dutch
astronomer Willem deSitter used Einstein's general theory of relativity to
develop his own model of the Universe. His model was unique in that it did not
take into consideration the existence of matter in the Universe. However it did
go beyond Einstein's model in that it predicted the redshift, even though de
Sitter felt it was an illusion, and did not at the time link it to any
recession of celestial objects. The academic community of 1930 did not fully
embrace either model of the universe. Then the Secretary of the Royal
Astronomical Society in England was made aware that three years previous, one
of his students had written a theory of the universe independent of the two
major forces in cosmological theory. Georges Lemaître created a cosmology that
predicted a universe that was forever in a state of expansion. When this theory
was rejuvenated by its republication in the journal Monthly Notices, it brought
to the table another similar theory that was devised ten years earlier.
Aleksander Friedmann, a Russian mathematician, analyzed Einstein's cosmological
constant that produced a static universe. Friedmann proved that there are three
possibilities for the universe when the cosmological constant is zero. If the
matter in the universe is greater than the critical density, the universe would
ultimately collapse back onto itself. If the inverse is correct the universe
would expand forever. If the universe were flat with a constant of zero at
critical density, the universe would again expand infinitely. Both Lemaître and
Friedmann's solutions were analyzed by Einstein and were summarily dismissed.
It was not until Hubble had proved that galaxies were in fact receding in 1932
that Einstein was forced to drop his static universe model. The observational
proof that the universe was expanding, combined with the models of Friedmann
and Lemaître that predicted an expanding universe unified the cosmologist and
the astronomer in agreement. The only question remained was if the universe is
expanding, what was the origination of this expansion? Lemaître used the second
law of thermodynamics as his starting point. Based on the assumption that the
expansion of the universe was an increase in the disorder of a system,
originating from a singularity of neutrons, this primordial nucleus would then
explode where an increase in the entropy of the universe would be apparent. On
May 9, 1931, Lemaître published his theory of the universe in the journal
Nature and it was met with general skepticism (Parker).
George Gamow expounded on
Lemaître's work, using recent discoveries in quantum theory. Lemaître
formulated his model based on the theory that a giant nucleus began to entropy,
breaking down into individual constituents. Gamow believed that a nucleus
containing not only neutrons but protons and electrons as well was the starting
point. Due to the very high amount of radiant energy in the early universe,
temperature would be in excess of one billion degrees Kelvin. At five minutes
old, Gamow speculated, this universe would have particles that could not
combine. But as the expansion began the temperatures would decrease and nuclear
fusion would occur. Atoms would form as protons and neutrons would attach
themselves to one another. Gamow then Hypothesized that all the elements in the
Universe were created at this time. One year later however, it was proven that
Gamow's math didn't stand up to scrutiny as it was shown that atomic mass 5
could not have been created from this primordial nucleus, as well as mass 8
(Gribbin).
Although all of the elements in
the universe were proven not to have originated from the Primordial Fireball,
the theory gained momentum until it received a worthy adversarial cosmology
known as the Steady State Theory. Fred Hoyle (who despairingly coined the term
Big Bang) and his colleagues constructed a model of the universe that was
widely accepted for religious reasons if not so much for its scientific
hypothesis. Hoyle suggested that the universe is infinitely old and has
remained in a steady state except that the universe was indeed expanding.
However galaxies are not receding from one another but space is constantly
being created between galaxies. In order for the average density to remain
constant, Hoyle suggested that matter had to be created in these new areas
where space was expanding. Only one hydrogen atom needed to be created every
year in an area the size of a 100 meter cube to account for the expansion. This
spontaneous generation of matter Hoyle argues would allow for the formation of
new galaxies between ancient ones and the Universe would maintain its steady
state. It would then follow that astronomers would be able to detect young
galaxies in the midst's of very old ones. This was one of the many
inconsistencies that were found with the Steady State Theory. In the 1950's
Steady State Theorists took a heavy blow when radio galaxies were discovered
showing that, consistent with big bang Cosmology, galaxies evolved and were
very active billions of years ago (Parker).
Finally the empirical evidence
big bangers had predicted was observed in 1965 by Bell Labs Arno Penzias and
Robert Wilson. Robert Dicke of Princeton University was the first to search for
fossil remains of the big bang. Dicke suggested that the Big bang emanated from
a previous universe and that a temperature in excess of one billion degrees was
necessary to create our new universe. This energy would in turn produce an
infinitesimal amount of radiation that should be measurable to this day. Based
on Planck's law that all bodies emit energy that can be documented on an
electromagnetic diagram. Depending on the length of the wave they can register
anywhere from X rays to radio waves and everything in between. A bodies
emission of energy is contingent upon the constituent elements of the body, the
amount of surface area of the body and the surface temperature of the body. The
body that emits the greatest amount of energy is a so called black body. Using
Planck's Black Body Curve as a guide Dicke theorized that the Cosmic Background
Radiation of the Big Bang should be about 3° above absolute zero. Dicke's
colleague Jim Peebles also concluded that when the Fireball's remnants cooled
to 3000° Kelvin nuclei would be able to form and helium was able to form from
hydrogen. This left a universe with a mixture of approximately 75% hydrogen and
25% helium, resembling the same amount of helium found in the Sun. Peebles
concluded that since the two most abundant elements in the universe were
created when the Universe was at 3000° K and since then the universe has
expanded by a factor of 1000 the radiation from the Big Bang should have a
temperature of about 10° K. Later refinements to these equations revised the
estimated temperature to 3° K. Dicke and Peebles were confident that there
instruments would be the first to detect this Cosmic Background Radiation
(Parker). At the same time Penzias and Wilson were busy attempting to measure
radiation from the Milky Way Galaxy. They were narrowing in on their source
when they were left with a noise that was interfering with their signal. This
noise originated from cosmic radiation and had a temperature of 3°K. It seemed
to be coming in from all directions and never fluctuated. With their original
research corrupted due to the unexplained noise they resigned themselves to writing
a paper on this unexplainable phenomenon. Months later Penzia's discovered that
Peebles group was searching for this relic radiation without success. Upon
further examination they realized that Penzia and Wilson had stumbled upon the
single most important discovery that confirmed the Primordial big bang
Explosion(Parker).
Big Bang theorists made several
predictions that have eventually supported the theory. The first is Hubble's
observation of the redshift-distance relationship. This relationship enables us
to approximate the age of the universe with the help of three separate
celestial bodies that all arrive at the same relative result. Hubble used what
is known as "standard candles" to build a "cosmic distance
ladder." By knowing the distance of certain celestial bodies he would be
able to incrementally construct an age for the Universe. These standard candles
were: Cepheid variables in neighborhood galaxies; bright stars in more distant
galaxies and in galaxies millions of parsecs away, the brightness of the galaxy
itself was used as a standard candle (Maffei)
Central to the question of the
age of the Universe are two important theoretical terms. The Hubble Constant
refers to how fast the velocities of the galaxies increase with their distance
from the Earth. There is quite a raging debate on the value of this constant
ranging from 50 Km/sec per Mpc (Mpc is a Megaparsec, about 3 million light
years) to 100 Km/sec per Mpc. This explains the disparity in the 5 billion year
estimate for the age of the universe. The other constant of importance is known
as q that defines the deceleration of the expansion of the universe.
Depending on the critical density of the universe that this q constant
is based, the universe will prove to be either infinitely expanding as in the
flat and open models, or an oscillating closed universe; a big crunch/big bang
universe that will ultimately condense back into a singularity and begin the
process all over again(Weinberg). Hubble's successor Allan Sandage predicted a
closed universe when he plotted a number of radio galaxies many billions of
light years away. The evidence for this closed universe was quickly challenged
a few years later and eventually fell out of favor. To this day the Hubble
Constant and the q constant remain the two most important unanswered
problems in modern cosmology.
Observations have also supported
the predictions of theorists that certain elements could only have been created
moments after the big bang. Based on the relationship between the amount of helium
in the universe and the number of different types of particle
"families" researchers concluded that there is one neutrino per
family of particles. Due to the current energy density of the universe there
will be a corresponding amount of helium produced. This in turn will create
different types of neutrinos. When the predicted amount of neutrinos
corresponded to what was observed it was another victory for the big bang
cosmology(Wald).
After the discovery of the
cosmic background radiation in 1965 scientists were eager to extend their
research into outer space through the use of a man-made satellite orbiting the
Earth. From this vantage point an unimpeded opportunity to study this
phenomenon would be made available and by late 1989 the Cosmic Background Explorer
(COBE) was ready for action. COBE consisted of three separate experiments. The
first instrument was known as the FIRAS, an acronym for the Far Infrared
Absolute Spectrometer. This instrument was created to confirm the research
previously accumulated that the background radiation does indeed have a black
body spectrum (Hoverstein).
The next question COBE attempted
to answer was, is the background radiation the same temperature in all
directions? Big bang theory states that in order to have mass condense and form
galaxies, there must be inhomogeneities left over from the Big bang that will
be able to be detectable. The differential microwave radiometer (DMR) was
designed to detect anisotropy fluctuations on the scale of 30 millionths of a
degree. Inflation theory predicted such fluctuations and that quantum processes
at work during the primordial stages of the big bang (when the universe was the
size of a proton) allowed for clouds of matter to condense into galaxies
(Sawyer).
The final experiment was known
as DIRBE. The Differential Infrared Background Experiment was designed to look
into the farthest corners of the Universe; upwards of 15 billion light years
away from the Earth, and accumulate data on the infrared light of these
primordial galaxies. DIRBE data is continuing to be accumulated with no conclus
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