The beginning. The ultimate point of unification of
all physical laws and yet also that point where every thing we know about those
laws breaks down and leaves us with only more questions. However, in spite of the limitations to our
knowledge, science has built a remarkably robust consensus on the story of the
universe from very early times to the present. Through what has been pieced
together from astronomy and particle physics within the framework of General
Relativity (GR) there is broad agreement about the history of the universe from
about the first 1 billionth of a second after the beginning.
Physics looks back through time through three
'windows' on the early universe (see Table 1). The primary way of perceiving is
through our theories, extrapolating known laws back to the beginning then
directs and organizes the quest for understanding (see for e.g. Gell-Mann,2007). The second window is the direct observation the universe around us; we
observe the past as we look at light from distant events. The final window is
our experiments, where comparable conditions to those found in the Big Bang or
astronomical objects are simulated and our theories tested.
Developmental stage of
universe
|
Windows on the universe
|
|||
Time relative to Big Bang (seconds)
|
Theoretical
|
Observational
|
Experimental
|
|
Before?
|
Augustinian Era
|
Theology
|
||
0
|
Singularity
|
Classical GR predicts
infinities;
–
the laws break down. |
||
0 > 10-43
|
The Planck Era
|
Heuristic quantum theory
of gravity in place of future unified theory of GR and QM – supergravity or
String Theory
|
|
|
10-43 > 10-36
|
The grand unification
Era
|
GUT
|
||
10-35
|
||||
Baryogenesis
|
|
Matter still in
existence
|
No observed preference
for energy to create matter over antimatter
|
|
10-32
|
Inflationary Era
|
|||
10-23
|
Standard Model of
particle physics – Does the Higgs Boson give rise to mass?
|
Particles have rest mass
|
Large Hadron Collider
(LHC) - particle accelerator at CERN, will look for Higgs. (May 2008 - now found)
|
|
10-12
|
Electroweak Era – the
weak force and electromagnetism are unified at this stage.
|
Quantum ElectroDynamics,
Standard Model of
particle physics valid to these energies.
|
|
Accelerators explore
here, e.g.
Relativistic Heavy Ion
Collider: created quark-gluon plasma
|
1013
|
Recombination- the
universe becomes transparent to light.
|
Black body thermal
radiation
|
CMB radiation starts its
journey
Temperature ~ 3000K
|
|
5´1017
(Now)
|
Anthropic principle to
explain “Goldilocks” conditions
|
We exist, & observe
stars, galaxies, CMB, the universe...
|
||
Table 1. Windows on the universe.
When Einstein formulated general relativity he
recognised that its equations implied that the universe must be evolving in
time. Like Newton, he preferred the idea of an eternal universe and in order to
maintain the static solution he introduced the cosmological constant in order
to balance gravity. It was Friedman and then Lemaître who first proposed the
concept of a dynamic universe with a beginning, and the expansion of the universe was then confirmed
observationally by Hubble. By identifying the standard candle of Cepheid
variable stars, in 1923 Hubble first proved that some nebula were in fact
galaxies far beyond our own. Further observations showed that these galaxies
were moving away from us, as indicated by the Doppler shift of the light we
receive from them. When the distance was plotted against the speed of the
galaxy it could be seen that the further away from us a galaxy was, the faster
it was receding. In other words it looked like at some point in the past all
the matter in the galaxies would have been compressed together. The linear
relationship between recessional velocities of galaxies and their distance from
us, known as Hubble's law, is still one of the main evidences for the Big Bang.
Figure 1. Summary of the Stages of
Evolution in the
Standard
Cosmological Model of the Universe, the Big Bang.
This gave rise to the framework of the Standard Model of cosmology (see
Fig 1). All solutions of GR originate at a point when the density is infinite
and the scale factor (the distance light could have traveled from the
beginning; the universe could still be infinite in extent at the beginning) is
zero. This point of origin is the Big Bang singularity, at this point the laws
of physics break down and it is not possible to predict what the emerging universe
will be like. This was an apparent dead end with the need for an external
reason to set the initial conditions. Fred Hoyle, Hermann Bondi and Thomas
Gold, among others, saw it as a philosophically ugly concept. This led them to
recover the notion of an eternal universe by proposing the Steady State model
where matter is continually created in the expanding space and on average the
universe is unchanging.
Early Big Bang
theorists George Gamow and Ralph Alpher built on work by Hans Bethe who first
provided those nuclear mechanisms by which hydrogen is fused into helium (see
Era of nucleosynthesis in Fig 1). The primordial nucleons (neutrons and
protons) were formed from the quark-gluon plasma of the Big Bang as it cooled
below ten million degrees. A few minutes afterwards, starting with only these
neutrons and protons, nuclei up to lithium and beryllium (both with mass number
7) were formed but only in relatively small amounts. In the Big Bang model this
process of primordial nucleosynthesis predicts the observed ratio of Hydrogen
to Helium (~ 25% He). Ironically
further work on nucleosynthesis of heavier elements in stars by Hoyle gave further support to the Big Bang theory. Hoyle's work
explained how the abundances of the heavier elements increased with time as the
galaxy aged and filled the gap in the Big Bang nucleosynthesis
explanation. His theoretical work required the existence of an excited state of the
carbon nucleus of 7.65 MeV that had not been observed before. At Hoyle's
pressing nuclear physicist Willy Fowler and his team looked for and found (in
1953) the previously overlooked state (Singh, 2005:395).
ultimately gravity, will be unified with
the other forces.
This particle physics based avenue of inquiry into the beginning of the
universe has been extended much since Hoyles' time. Experiments which recreate
high energy conditions similar to those a couple of seconds after the big bang
can now take us back to where electromagnetic force is unified with the weak
nuclear force, Fig 2.
In between the
classical singularity of GR and the experimentally probed electro-weak
unification, there are an infinite number of potential string theories (VanProeyen, 2004) and hundreds of inflationary models and untested grand
unification theories all looking for astronomical observations, or for the new
results from the Large Hadron Collider (LHC), in order to confirm or eliminate
theorys on the bases of their predictions. The LHC will recreate the conditions
existing a billionth of a second after the beginning of the Big Bang. The
re-creation of these conditions should provide us with information about energy
levels beyond those for which the Standard Model of particle physics gives
intelligible answers. The hope is that we will gain insight into a new theory
of particle physics and the conditions of the very early universe.
The Steady State model survived for some time, but this model could not
account for the observations of radio sources from 1955 on, which showed that
there were many more radio sources further away
from us than there were close by. This meant that either we are situated in a
region of the universe in which radio strong sources are less frequent, or that
there were more radio strong sources at some time in the past than when the
radiation was emitted. Neither possibility supports
the steady state prediction that the distribution of sources should be constant
in space and time, although questions about discrepancies in the observations
remained for a while.
The prediction and observation of the exact temperature of the cosmic
microwave background radiation (CMB) in 1964 finally confirmed the Big Bang
over the Steady State model. The Big Bang model predicted that there must have
been a time in the past when the universe was hot and dense, with radiation and
matter in equilibrium and we should be able to observe the left over radiation.
Using this 'light' the earliest we can reach is the point the universe became transparent
when it was about 300,000 years old. Before this time matter was fully ionised
and the charged particles scattered the light, Fig 3. When matter had cooled
enough the electrons combined with the baryonic matter to give neutral atoms.
At this point radiation de-coupled from matter and free streamed through the
universe (Fig 4). As the space it was traveling through expanded it's
wavelength was red-shifted so that it's temperature has reduced from about
3000K to 2.7K today.
Figure 3. Observations take us back through time as we look at more distant objects.

Figure 3. Observations take us back through time as we look at more distant objects.
We can only see back in
time to the point where the universe became transparent.
Before the observations of the Hubble expansion and the CMB the most
cosmologically significant observation was that the sky at night is dark.
Olbers' paradox states that in an infinitely large universe there will always
be a star on any given line of sight, and so the night sky should actually be
as bright as the surface of the sun. This paradox is only solved by the facts
that the universe is finite in time (so that light has not yet reached us from
very distant stars) and the initial radiation of the Big Bang has been red
shifted and cooled.
Figure 5. Stellar evolution
After recombination
the universe expanded getting cooler and darker until gravitational attraction
amplified the initial fluctuations in the smooth distribution of matter and
clouds of gas and dust formed (Fig 5). The more compact matter becomes, the stronger
the force of gravity; so the process of collapse accelerates and becomes more
violent as particles collide and compress to form a sphere at the nebula's
heart. The Protostar heats as it collapses until it is
hot enough for nuclear reactions to start. The star ignites, and starts burning
Hydrogen. At this point it has joined the 'Main Sequence' of stars on the Hertzsprung-Russell plot
(Fig 6) where it remains for some time as the radiation pressure (from the heat
of collapse and nuclear reactions) maintains the star from further collapse.
The future evolution and 'death' of a star depends on its mass. Higher
mass stars evolve more quickly with higher temperatures which enable then to
fuse heavier elements up to iron. As time passes the star builds up a central
core of elements for which the temperature is not high enough to fuse. For
stars over 0.4 solar masses the outer layers of the star will expand forming a
red giant while the core continues to contract. In addition to the thermal
pressure from the kinetic energy of collapse or nuclear reactions there are two
further barriers to the continuing gravitational collapse of the star core. The
first is electron degeneracy which arises from the Pauli exclusion principle
which limits the number of electrons that can exist in a given energy level.
For main-sequence stars with a mass below approximately 8 solar masses the mass
of the core remains below this limit, called the Chandrasekhar limit. The core
stops collapsing and the outer layers will be blown off leaving a white dwarf.
Stars with higher mass will develop a degenerate core whose mass will grow
until it exceeds the limit. Inverse beta decay is then energetically favored
and the electrons are captured by protons in the core. At this point the star will
explode in a core-collapse supernova, leaving behind a neutron star or, if the
mass of the remnant of exceeds ~3-4 solar masses (either because the original
star was very heavy or because of accretion of additional matter) even the
final barrier of neutron degeneracy pressure is insufficient to stop the
collapse. After this there is no known mechanism which is powerful enough to
stop total collapse to a point or singularity. The strength of gravity up to
the “event horizon” is now so strong that light can not escape and the star is
a black hole.
![]() |
Figure 6. Hertzsprung-Russell diagram showing an Example of Stellar Evolution.
(The diagonal lines indicate the
radius of the star relative to the sun.)
Just as there is a balance between the thermal pressure and the
gravitational force for a star of a given mass, temperature and density
(described by Jeans equation) that determines if collapse will happen, there is
a balance between the kinetic energy of the Hubble expansion and the
gravitational potential energy of the universe. Balancing these two terms leads
to the definition of the critical density:
At this critical density the
cosmological density parameter Ωm is defined as being exactly equal
to 1.
This is described as being a flat
universe which will continue to expand asymptotically to zero speed at
infinity.
If there is less matter than this
and Ωm<1 the Universe will continue to expand indefinitely. The
result of continuous expansion would be, according to the 1st Law of
Thermodynamics, a Universe which would gradually cool down until the
temperature became 0 Kelvin. If the density is larger than the critical value Ωm>1
the Universe will expand to a point, and then collapse on itself. It has been
postulated that if the Universe were to carry on this course, all matter would
re-condense into a singularity, and maybe recreate another big bang. Current
observations suggest that the expansion of the universe is accelerating, theory
can account for this by adding a “dark energy” term to the equations of GR (Ων>0).
The red curve on Fig 7 shows the evolution taking in to account this
accelerated expansion due to dark energy.
Figure 7. The end of the universe?










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