Difference between revisions of "Dynamics of the Universe in terms of redshift and conformal time"

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(Problem 1.)
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\Omega _{r0}(1+z)^4 + \Omega_{m0}(1+z)^3+
 
\Omega _{r0}(1+z)^4 + \Omega_{m0}(1+z)^3+
 
\Omega_{k0}(1+z)^2\right].\]
 
\Omega_{k0}(1+z)^2\right].\]
At large $z$ (early Universe) the term with the highest power becomes dominating -- that is, the one with radiation. As the term with curvature is very small at present (see problem (\ref{dyn3})), it was all the more negligible before. On the other hand, it should become dominating in the future ($1+z\to 0$), but in the standard cosmological model, which will be discussed in the corresponding chapter later, the cosmological constant enters the play before that, and the curvature term does not ever have the chance to shine.</p>
+
At large $z$ (early Universe) the term with the highest power becomes dominating -- that is, the one with radiation. As the term with curvature is very small at present (see [[Cosmological horizons#dyn3|problem]]), it was all the more negligible before. On the other hand, it should become dominating in the future ($1+z\to 0$), but in the standard cosmological model, which will be discussed in the corresponding chapter later, the cosmological constant enters the play before that, and the curvature term does not ever have the chance to shine.</p>
 
   </div>
 
   </div>
 
</div>
 
</div>
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<div id="dyn63"></div>
 
<div id="dyn63"></div>
 
<div style="border: 1px solid #AAA; padding:5px;">
 
<div style="border: 1px solid #AAA; padding:5px;">
 +
 
=== Problem 2. ===
 
=== Problem 2. ===
 
Find the conformal time as function of the scale factor for a Universe with domination of '''a)''' radiation and '''b)''' non-relativistic matter.
 
Find the conformal time as function of the scale factor for a Universe with domination of '''a)''' radiation and '''b)''' non-relativistic matter.

Revision as of 21:29, 23 July 2012


Problem 1.

Express the first Friedman equation in terms of redshift and analyze the contribution of different terms in different epochs.


Problem 2.

Find the conformal time as function of the scale factor for a Universe with domination of a) radiation and b) non-relativistic matter.


Problem 3.

Find the relation between time and redshift in the Universe with dominating matter.


Problem 4.

Derive $a(\eta)$ for a spatially flat Universe with dominating radiation.


Problem 5.

Express the cosmic time through the conformal time in a Universe with dominating radiation.


Problem 6.

Derive $a(\eta)$ for a spatially flat Universe with dominating matter.


Problem 7.

Find $a(\eta)$ for a spatially flat Universe filled with a mixture of radiation and matter.


Problem 8.

Suppose a component's state parameter $w_i=p_i/\rho_i$ is a function of time. Find its density as function of redshift.


Problem 9.

Derive the Hubble parameter as a function of redshift in a Universe filled with non-relativistic matter.


Problem 10.

The redshift of any object slowly changes with time due to acceleration (or deceleration) of the Universe's expansion. Find the rate of change of redshift $\dot{z}$ for a Universe with dominating non-relativistic matter.



Problem 11.

The Universe is known to have become transparent for electromagnetic waves at $z\approx 1100$ (in the process of formation of neutral hydrogen, recombination), i.e when it was $1100$ times smaller than at present. Thus in practice the possibility of optical observation of the Universe optically is limited by the so-called optical horizon: the maximal distance that light travels since the moment of recombination. Find the ratio of the optical horizon to the particle one for a Universe dominated by matter.



Problem 12.

Derive the particle horizon as function of redshift for a Universe filled with matter and radiation with relative densities $\Omega_{m0}$ and $\Omega_{r0}$.



Problem 13.

Show that any signal emitted from the cosmological horizon will arrive to the observer with infinite redshift.