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Week 2 (9/27) – Opinion Poll I am taking this class because:
Week 2 (9/27) – Opinion Poll I am taking this class because:

This is a preview of the published version of the quiz
This is a preview of the published version of the quiz

... As applied to the Universe, critical density basically refers to the Universe in a perfect balance - expansion slowing but never stops.  What are the options for the actual density of the Universe, referred to as ...
Origin of Life - BlackSage.com
Origin of Life - BlackSage.com

... • If big bang then there should exist remanentt heat • The cosmic microwave background was predicted in 1948 • 1964-65Arno Penzias and Robert Woodrow Wilson measured the temperature to be approximately 2.725 K which translates to specific background radiation in the microwave range. • This radiation ...
Mass Outflow in the Seyfert 1 Galaxy NGC 4151
Mass Outflow in the Seyfert 1 Galaxy NGC 4151

... • Gamov (1948) – predicted that early Big Bang was hot, emitted blackbody radiation  in present era, we’d see a redshifted blackbody spectrum ...
Section 7 The Big Bang Theory
Section 7 The Big Bang Theory

... CMB radiation was emitted only a few hundred thousand years after the Big Bang, and therefore long before stars or galaxies ever existed. Thus, by studying the physical properties of the radiation, we can learn about conditions in the universe during very early times and on very large scales, since ...
helium
helium

... equilibrium all of the physics is determined only by temperature  In general, at early times, this means that the conditions of the Universe at some temperature, T, don’t depend on what happened at earlier times and higher temperature ...
Spacebook Research Project
Spacebook Research Project

... to edit this page and creativity is worth extra credit!! We will cover all of the pieces of this essay in class though some of it will not be till the end of the unit. BiG BanG Question. How did Universe get here anyway? The universe is very old and every day we are gathering more evidence about how ...
natsci9+
natsci9+

... problem, it also solved the other 4 problems that the BBT failed to solve. The BBT was amended that the universe expanded very fast (inflated) during the brief period 10-35 to 10-32 s after creation. This period saw the separation of strong force from others. After this period, the usual expansion o ...
Document
Document

... from the observer is increased in wavelength, or shifted to the red end of the spectrum. In general, whether or not the radiation is within the visible spectrum, "redder" means an increase in wavelength – equivalent to a lower frequency and a lower photon energy, in accordance with, respectively, th ...
viz05 - KICP Workshops
viz05 - KICP Workshops

... Cavity oscillations in time cease: true sound dies However, the roughness grows quickly: • the baryons fall into dark matter “valleys” • the dark matter itself gets more clumpy • after 100 Myr the peaks collapse  stars ! Continue to create sound from P(k) ...
Electromagnetic spectrum
Electromagnetic spectrum

... refracts and reflects light from a nearby star  A dark nebula is an interstellar molecular cloud whose dust blocks light from stars on the other side of it ...
The Transient Radio Sky Astrophysical and Artificial
The Transient Radio Sky Astrophysical and Artificial

... The last unexplored phase of cosmic evolution (0.1 to 1Gyr after BB) Experiment: Imaging 3D ‘tomography’ of IGM in HI 21cm line ...
SOLUTIONS TO PROBLEM SET # 4
SOLUTIONS TO PROBLEM SET # 4

... ρair ≈ 1.2 kg/ m3 at sea level at a temperature T = 20◦ C = 68◦ F . (It becomes denser when cooler, and less dense when warmer.) Thus, the density of matter at the time of primordial nucleosynthesis is less than the density of the Earth’s air at sea level, by a factor of a hundred. (Although the uni ...
Document
Document

Detection of Point Sources in Maps of the
Detection of Point Sources in Maps of the

... important of the physical processes by which the primordial density fluctuations left their imprint on the CMB in the form of small variations in the temperature of this radiation in different directions on the sky. It has its origin in the gravitational potentials at the surface of last scattering, ...
Unit 1
Unit 1

... solar system is 4.6 billion years old? • They use the process of radioactive decay to date objects in our solar system. Radioactive decay is the natural process by which a specific atom or isotope is converted into another specific atom or isotope at a constant and known rate. By measuring the effec ...
Astro 10: Introductory Astronomy
Astro 10: Introductory Astronomy

... Textbook – “The Cosmic Perspective – Stars, Galaxies, Cosmology” – Bennett, Donahue, Schneider, and Voit; 5th Edition • ~$70 new in the bookstore. No used ones around yet. • I will try to get one copy on reserve in the library ...
The Origin of the Universe - Christos N. Hadjichristidis
The Origin of the Universe - Christos N. Hadjichristidis

... Our Universe has probably originated from a Big Bang as supported by both Hubble’s and Cosmic Microwave Radiation Background (first light to break free after the Big Bang) discoveries We found that the age of our Universe is about 12-13 billion years by: ...
Document
Document

... • Learn some astronomy. The details are not so important, the fact that we have been able to learn so much about the Universe is a more important point. ...
document
document

... Newtonian cosmology results in a paradox: • Why is the night sky dark instead of light? – Every line of sight will have a star or other source of light ...
Temperature of stars
Temperature of stars

...  Be ...
Here - gcisd
Here - gcisd

... lights on Earth’s surface or particles in Earth’s atmosphere. One such instrument is the Wilkinson Microwave Anisotropy Probe (WMAP). WMAP is a satellite launched in 2001 to examine cosmic microwave background (CMB) radiation, which is electromagnetic radiation left over from the initial stages of t ...
inflation
inflation

...  it has special significance for the formation of structures that was only possible in the matter regime  At early times, radiation and matter are thermally and dynamically coupled by Compton interactions (nearly in thermal equilibrium). As the temperature gets low, the electrons become slow enoug ...
Cosmology
Cosmology

Astronomy Basics
Astronomy Basics

... Slide 6: Gallery picture from Keck Observatory Slide 2: Educational graphic from Imagine the Universe! Slide 3: Harvard's Field Guide to X-ray Astronomy. Slide 7: Educational graphic from Imagine the Universe! ...
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Cosmic microwave background



The cosmic microwave background (CMB) is the thermal radiation left over from the time of recombination in Big Bang cosmology. In older literature, the CMB is also variously known as cosmic microwave background radiation (CMBR) or ""relic radiation."" The CMB is a cosmic background radiation that is fundamental to observational cosmology because it is the oldest light in the universe, dating to the epoch of recombination. With a traditional optical telescope, the space between stars and galaxies (the background) is completely dark. However, a sufficiently sensitive radio telescope shows a faint background glow, almost exactly the same in all directions, that is not associated with any star, galaxy, or other object. This glow is strongest in the microwave region of the radio spectrum. The accidental discovery of CMB in 1964 by American radio astronomers Arno Penzias and Robert Wilson was the culmination of work initiated in the 1940s, and earned the discoverers the 1978 Nobel Prize.The CMB is a snapshot of the oldest light in our Universe, imprinted on the sky when the Universe was just 380,000 years old. It shows tiny temperature fluctuations that correspond to regions of slightly different densities, representing the seeds of all future structure: the stars and galaxies of today.The CMB is well explained as radiation left over from an early stage in the development of the universe, and its discovery is considered a landmark test of the Big Bang model of the universe. When the universe was young, before the formation of stars and planets, it was denser, much hotter, and filled with a uniform glow from a white-hot fog of hydrogen plasma. As the universe expanded, both the plasma and the radiation filling it grew cooler. When the universe cooled enough, protons and electrons combined to form neutral atoms. These atoms could no longer absorb the thermal radiation, and so the universe became transparent instead of being an opaque fog. Cosmologists refer to the time period when neutral atoms first formed as the recombination epoch, and the event shortly afterwards when photons started to travel freely through space rather than constantly being scattered by electrons and protons in plasma is referred to as photon decoupling. The photons that existed at the time of photon decoupling have been propagating ever since, though growing fainter and less energetic, since the expansion of space causes their wavelength to increase over time (and wavelength is inversely proportional to energy according to Planck's relation). This is the source of the alternative term relic radiation. The surface of last scattering refers to the set of points in space at the right distance from us so that we are now receiving photons originally emitted from those points at the time of photon decoupling.Precise measurements of the CMB are critical to cosmology, since any proposed model of the universe must explain this radiation. The CMB has a thermal black body spectrum at a temperature of 7000272548000000000♠2.72548±0.00057 K. The spectral radiance dEν/dν peaks at 160.2 GHz, in the microwave range of frequencies. (Alternatively if spectral radiance is defined as dEλ/dλ then the peak wavelength is 1.063 mm.) The glow is very nearly uniform in all directions, but the tiny residual variations show a very specific pattern, the same as that expected of a fairly uniformly distributed hot gas that has expanded to the current size of the universe. In particular, the spectral radiance at different angles of observation in the sky contains small anisotropies, or irregularities, which vary with the size of the region examined. They have been measured in detail, and match what would be expected if small thermal variations, generated by quantum fluctuations of matter in a very tiny space, had expanded to the size of the observable universe we see today. This is a very active field of study, with scientists seeking both better data (for example, the Planck spacecraft) and better interpretations of the initial conditions of expansion. Although many different processes might produce the general form of a black body spectrum, no model other than the Big Bang has yet explained the fluctuations. As a result, most cosmologists consider the Big Bang model of the universe to be the best explanation for the CMB.The high degree of uniformity throughout the observable universe and its faint but measured anisotropy lend strong support for the Big Bang model in general and the ΛCDM (""Lambda Cold Dark Matter"") model in particular. Moreover, the fluctuations are coherent on angular scales that are larger than the apparent cosmological horizon at recombination. Either such coherence is acausally fine-tuned, or cosmic inflation occurred.
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