Writer's Note: 1) Most of the pages in this Section are image-intensive, so that the large number of illustrations can lead to a lengthy download time for those using modems connected to telephone lines; 2) Some parts or ideas presented in this Section may seem repetitious, i.e., are stated more than once; this reiteration is deliberate - much of the topics covered tend to be complex and unfamiliar to the non-specialist reader (those who are not astronomers, cosmologists, physicists), so that repeating is a helpful aid in reminding one of these previously developed ideas and tying them (making them relevant) to the other subjects where they later appear.
There will be no individual page
summaries in Section 20 which deals with Cosmology: The Origin, Composition,
Structure, Development, and History of the Universe (or Universes, if there are
more than one). This is largely because of the complexity and wide range of
ideas on each page: this does not lend itself easily to synopsize. The reader
instead must work through the knowledge imparted on each page without the aid of
a preview or reduction to a simplified digest. If the field is new to you,
several readings of this Section may be needed to facilitate mastery of this
ultimate subject: the Origin of Everything. Also, if a novice, you should profit
from working through the excellent online "textbook" in Astronomy prepared by
Dr. J. Schombert at the University of Oregon, which have been referenced in the
Preface . In keeping
with the Overview and the 20 Sections that have followed, every illustration
will be accompanied by a synoptic caption.
Despite this absence of summaries,
we will attempt to abridge the overall ideas underlying Astronomy and Cosmology
in this summary:
ASTRONOMY deals
mainly with the description of the objects, materials, structure, and
distribution of what appears to exist beyond the Earth itself. Astronomy
as an observing "science" traces its roots to early civilizations such as the
pre-Christian era Babylonians, Egyptians, Greeks, and Chinese and the Mayans and
Aztecs in the New World. Star groupings, the constellations, were established
and became involved in myths that suggested deity controls of how the World
(i.e., the Universe) is able to function. COSMOLOGY
deals with the origin, development, and future expectations of/for the
Universe, and also began in early times, with both myths and theological
explanations for the meaning and cause(s) of the phyical (natural) World
including and beyond the Earth gradually being supplanted by
scientifically-based observations. Key ideas that provide this basis include the
postulates by such Greek philosophers as Pythagoras, Euxodus, and Aristotle, and
the later (ca. 140 BCE) Ptolemaic description of epicyclic "heavenly" motions;
these persisted largely as philosophical musings until the advent of Copernicus
in the 16th Century CE who posited the heliocentric theory for the Solar System
(but suggested by Aristarchus in 280 BCE), followed by important contributions
from Tycho Brahe and Johannes Kepler soon thereafter. Galileo was the first to
use the telecope for astronomical observations. Isaac Newton provided the
foundation for the movements of stars and planets with his Laws of Gravity and
Motion. William Herschel in the late 1700s CE provided the first proof that the
Milky Way in which the Sun is located is an "Island Universe", or galaxy and
surmised that other such galaxies must exist. This lead to the beginning of the
modern era of Cosmology stemming for work by Edwin Hubble in the 1920s.
Before the beginning of the (this, there may be
others) Universe there was no time nor space, no energy (in the discrete forms
we know) nor matter - at least in the sense that we perceive these fundamental
"qualities". What may have existed is some as yet undefined quantum state in
which fluctuations in the "emptiness" led to extremely fleeting "particles"
containing the essence to grow into a Universe. Essentially all such evanescent
moments ended with the disappearance of the ??? (still unidentified entities:
energetic virtual particles or those constituting dark energy have been
proposed). But the potential was there for one such moment to see "creation" of
a singularity from when the Universe sprang.
This singularity was so unstable that it "exploded"
into what is known colloquially as the "Big Bang". That took place some 14.7
billion or so years ago. The first minute of Universe time was the critical
stage leading to the state of the Universe we observe today. We can trace
theoretically events during the minute back to 10-43 sec(onds), when
the Universe was infinitesimally small. (Experimentally, astrophysicists can
actually reconstruct the sequence and verify the essential physics of the
Universe?s early condition back to 10-12 seconds and to particle
sizes as small as 10-17 meters; better yet, a significant number
(most?) of the particles and forces (and fields through which they interact)
have now been defined and all but a few actually found and identified under
laboratory conditions.) Initially, the fundamental forces (strong; weak;
electromagnetic; gravity) were unified (as is being explained through the new
theory in physics called "superstrings"). But, they quickly separated
systematically into the individual forces. Although expansion was rapid, at
about 10-35 seconds, there was a one-time only extreme acceleration
of this minute Universe through a process called Inflation.
Thereafter, in this first minute as expansion
continued and the proto-Universe cooled to lower energy levels, the fermions
(matter) , controlled by the appropriate bosons (force), began to organize into
the protons and neutrons (composed of quarks), electrons, mesons, neutrinos, and
others of the myriads of particles continually being discovered in high energy
accelerator experiment in physics labs.
As the first minute ended, some particles began to
associate with others (and probably all the anti-matter that should have been
created was destroyed). In the first few minutes, particles began to organize
into nuclei that were part of a plasma state in which the mix included
electrons, photons, neutrinos and others. In the next 300,000 years or so, this
particle-radiation state witnessed the beginnings of organization into atoms,
mostly of hydrogen and some helium. After that time the Universe became
"transparent" so that communication through photon (light) radiation was
possible between segments of the Universe close enough to exchange information
at the speed of light. The Universe was almost completely homogeneous and
isotropic on a grand scale but locally tiny fluctuations in the state of matter
(mostly H and He), as appear in the irregularities in the Cosmic Background
Radiation (greatly cooled Big Bang "afterglow') led to gravitational clumping
(into nebulas) that grew simply because these slight increases in density
continued to increase the organization through the force of gravitational
attraction. From this eventually, in the first billion years, stars began to
form and to arrange in clusters called galaxies. These adopt specific shapes,
such as spiral, elliptical, or irregular.
Stars burn their hydrogen at high temperatures,
during which (depending on their size) they convert this fuel to heavier
elements (largest ones can produce elements up to iron in the Periodic Table).
Large stars die out rapidly (a few billion years to much less); small can
persist for times that are comparable to the total life of the Universe. During
their stable lifetimes, the stars hold together by a fine balance between inward
contraction under gravity, involving internal heating up, and the outward
pressure of the radiation produced by nuclear processes. Many stars can explode
as supernovae. Various types of stars evolve over time through distinct
pathways; among these are Red Giants; White Dwarfs; Brown Dwarfs Neutron Stars.
Black Holes are another, perhaps widespread, constituent of space. As a star
forms out of nebular material - gases mainly of some hydrogen and helium, and
other elements in various forms, including particulate dust), some of this
material not drawn into the growing star may collect in clots that would form
planetary bodies - rocks and gas balls - similar to those making up our Solar
System.
The composition of the Universe has only recently
been determined fairly precisely. Ordinary matter, making up the stars,
galaxies, gas/dust clouds and a small fraction of the so-called empty space,
accounts for about 4%. The rest is present in dark matter (undetected by any
technique so far; includes WIMPS and MACHOs) which seemingly increases around
galaxies, and makes up about 23% of a Universe that would give rise to the
conditions now measured in the Cosmic Background Radiation, and dark energy
(about 73%), tied to a still mysterious force that seems to act like the
anti-gravity force first postulated by Einstein, and is the prime candidate for
causing the obervation that the Universe now is once again expanding after
slowing down for the first seven or so billion years.
The fate of the Universe depends ultimately on how
much mass (and its convertible form, energy) it has. If that number is high the
Universe?s expansion will slow down and eventually reverse (contract) so that
all matter and energy collect again at a singularity which may undergo another
Big Bang. Or the matter/energy is insufficient to slow expansion and the
Universe enlarges forever. The shape of the Universe will depend on the nature
of the expansion; at large scales the Universe is subject to the laws of
Relativity (but equally as important is the role of matter/energy at the
smallest - quantum - scales. Recent information favors endless expansion and the
possibility that the rate of expansion is now increasing.
Add to all of this the theoretical (quantum-driven)
possibility that there may be multiple universes, unable to communicate with one
another, with new ones forming at various times and perhaps old ones dying in
some way. The mind boggles at this point. But even more amazing is the
realization that there is something we humans recognize as "mind" - our most
valuable property. Our minds have identified the ways in which planets form,
including those suited to hosting living creatures, and the very nature of life
itself.
Humankind has in the last 400 years, and especially
the last 50 years, developed the skills and the will to explore our Universe. We
now obtain data of great explanatory/interpretive value using telescopes that
gather in radiation from all parts of the EM spectrum. Thus, there are now
specialized observing systems that sample in the gamma- an x-ray, ultraviolet,
visible, near and far infrared, and radio wavelength regions of the spectrum -
astronomy is probably the prime user of nearly all segments of that spectrum, as
it gathers its information almost exclusively by remote sensing methods.
This is perchance a gross simplification of the big
picture. Read through this Section for more details. And watch for updates - so
much is happening now.
Before beginning this
Section, we urge you to read through this hidden Preface (once there, hit
your BACK button on the browser you use to return to this page). The Preface
contains four major topics: 1) the role of remote sensing in astronomy; 2) some
suitable references for additional information; and basic principles of 3)
Relativity, and 4) Quantum Physics. The Preface contains a list of some very
readable books and a number of Internet links to reviews or tutorials on
Astronomy/Cosmology. Also, most of the illustrations in this Section were made
from images and data acquired by spaceborne Observatories; for a listing of many
of these with links to homepages click on this Internet site produced by astronomers
at the Australian National University.
The Nature and Origin of Matter; The Early Eras
Cosmologists - those who
study the origin, structure, composition, space-time relations, and evolution of
the astronomical Universe - generally agree that the Universe had a
finite beginning which by 1990 fe;; between 12 and 16 Ga (Ga = 1 billion years
[b.y.]) ago; the current best estimate lies close to 14 Ga (13.7 is now
recognized as the most accurate value [see page 20-9]). This is derived
by measuring the time needed for light to have traveled from the observable
outer limit of the Universe to Earth in terms of light years *, which can be converted to
distances. The physical conditions that guaranteed the present Universe must
have burst into existence almost instantaneously. During the first minute of the
Universe's history, many of the fundamental principles of both Quantum Physics
(or, as applied to this situation, Quantum Cosmology) and Relativity - the two
greatest scientific discoveries of the 20th Century (see Preface, accessed by
link above) - played key roles in setting up the special conditions of this
Universe that have been uncovered and defined in the 20th Century. Quantum
processes were a vital governing factor during the buildup and modifications of
the particles and subparticles that arose in the earliest stages. Likewise,
Relativity influenced the space-time growth of the Cosmos from the very start.
In the most widely
accepted current model of the Universe, there is no starting place or time in
the conventional sense of human experience. Space**, as now defined and constrained
by the outer limits of the observable Universe, did not yet exist (see
below); also, sequential events, embedded in a temporal continuum, had
not begun. The observable Universe is just the visible or detectable part
extending to the outermost reach of the Universe where objects or sources of
radiation have sent signals traveling at the speed of light over an elapsed time
not greater (usually somewhat less) than the time (age) of the start of
expansion. Since now most cosmologists feel some confidence that there is
something beyond the observable Universe (be it the unseen parts of our Universe
or some other Universe(s)), that unobserved part plus the observed part is
sometimes spoken of as the Cosmos.
The initiating event,
referred to as the Big Bang, began at a point-like singularity (so
small that the notion of spatial three-dimensions [3-D] has no conceptual
meaning), some sort of quantum state of still-being-defined nature that marks
the inception of space/time (thus, without a preceding "where/when";
philosophically "uncaused"), from which all that was to become the Universe can
be mentally envisioned to have been concentrated. This singularity is thus
described as not quite a point (dimensionless) condition which has extreme
curvature and incredible density and where the laws of physics (including
relativity) break down, i.e., do not apply. The singularity also ties in
to the nearly instantaneous moment in time when the Universe is initiated after
which some things can be said about the earliest behaviour of the Universe in
terms of known or postulated concepts in physics). Just prior to the
singularity's unfolding into the first moments of the Universe, space and time
were completely joined (not distinguishable) but without any meaningful
geometric or temporal value.
At the very beginning of this (our)
Universe, multidimensional space and time came into being and began to take on
physical characteristics. But at the cosmic scale, these two fundamental
properties must, according to Special Relativity, comprise the 4-dimensional
spacetime Universe we now observe (according to some theories discussed below
and on page 20-10, additional dimensions are possible). The exact nature
(concept) of time is still not fully understood and is subject to continuing
debate (for an excellent review of time, read About Time: Einstein's
Unfinished Revolution by Paul Davies, 1995); also consult his Web site on
"What happened before the Big Bang" at this site (the
host site contains many interesting and provocative articles; click on Albert
Einstein within the page that comes up to get to the parent site). There is, of
course, the conventional time of everyday experience on Earth (years, days,
seconds, etc.), measured fairly precisely by atomic clocks (e.g., the pulsating
beat of a cesium atom, used to define the 'second') and less so by mechanical
timepieces or crystal watches. There are the redefining ideas of time consequent
upon Special Relativity, in which the perception of time units proceeds faster
or slower depending on frames of reference moving at different relative
velocities. There is the notion of "eternity" in which time just is - has no
specific beginning or ending.
But, all these measures and
concepts are difficult to extrapolate to that nebulous temporal state (if real)
which was before the singularity of our Universe came into being
(conceivably the singularity could have existed for some finite "time" before
its inevitable instability forced the beginning we describe below as the Big
Bang). But, time had to separate at that instant and become measurable in terms
we have set forth to use its property of steady progression of a temporal
nature. If nothing existed prior to the singularity event, then there is no
means to determine and measure the time involved as a prior state. If ours is
not the only Universe (see the discussion of multiverses on page 20-10), and
other Universes existed before the one we observe, then time in some way can be
pushed backward to their inceptions. One possibility is an infinite number of
Universes in time and space, with no end points for starts and
finishes (read Paul Davies' book for the philosophical as well as physical
implications of time, and the still unresolved dilemmas in specifying the
meaning of time). For our purposes in studying the Cosmology of the one known
Universe, we will assume a start to the time accompanying the moment of its
existence and its subsequent progression as being comprehensible in the units we
define for Earth living. Thus, the Universe, under this proposition, can be
dated as to its age in years. At the very beginning, the
fundamental energy within the singularity may have been (or been related to)
gravitational energy that controlled the nature of the singularity. An
alternative now being investigated is some form of repulsive energy
(similar to that once proposed by Albert Einstein) such as quintessence (see
page 20-10) which may prove to be related to the "dark energy" (page 20-9) that
seemingly dominates the present Universe. At the instant of singularity, the
initial energy (some of which was about to become matter) was compressed into a
state of extremely high density (density = mass or amount of matter [or its
energy equivalent] per specific [unit] volume), estimated to be about 1090
kg/cc (kilograms per cubic centimeter) and extraordinary temperatures,
perhaps in excess of 1032 °K (K = Kelvin = 273 + °C [C = degrees
Centigrade]), both without any counterpart in the presently observed Universe.
As you will see below, certain forms of matter came from the pure energy
released during the first fraction of a second of the Universe's history. The
famed Einstein equation E = mc2 accounts for the fact that under the
right conditions, energy can convert to matter, and vice-versa.
At the instant of creation, the
singularity (which theory holds to have been far less than 10-33 of a
centimeter in diameter), proved exceptionally unstable and proceeded to "come
apart" by experiencing something akin to an "explosion", which goes under the
popular name of the "Big Bang" (B.B); implicit in this is the general idea of
expansion (see page 20-1a, accessed through the link below on this page).
This was not an explosion in the conventional sense, such as produces an
incandescent gaseous fireball, but rather an extremely-violent release of
kinetic energy released from the singularity that initiated the general
expansion and has since (so far) exceeded the countering effect of gravity. The
prime effect was to create and enlarge space itself. The explosion is described
as "not into space" but "of space". Expansion is thus continuing to the
present in part because the inertial effects (evident in the observed
recessional motions of galaxies, etc.) imposed at the initial push still
influence how space grows and, now it is believed, in part due to the continuing
action of the above-mentioned repulsive energy. After the freeing of gravity
from the other fundamental forces (see below), it has since been acting on all
particles, from those grouped collectively into stars and clouds making up the
galaxies to individual nucleons, photons, etc. - thus at macro- to micro-scales.
Gravity therefore exacts one controlling influence on the rate of expansion,
serving to slow it down. As we shall elaborate later, recent evidence suggests
that anti-gravity forces (enabled by the repulsive energy of presently uncertain
nature) have overcome the restraining effects of gravity seeking to slow the
expansion and perhaps eventually draw matter together in a general collapse.
However, as treated on page 20-8, and again in the
second part of this page, this expansion is actually a dilation (or
"dilatation", a synonym) of space rather than a thrusting apart of individual
matter through direct outward motion as for a familiar example the centripetal
ejection of debris following a central explosion of, say, dynamite inside an
automobile. Thus, the matter does not physically travel as do particles from a
dynamite detonation site; space itself "travels" by progressive enlargement over
time.
One cannot speak of "there" in
reference to the singularity (because the space that characterizes our Universe
did not start to form until the moment of its beginning, it is difficult to
think of any "there" since no dimensional frame of reference can be specified).
At the outset of "creation" the singularity was made up of pure energy of some
kind (in a "virtual" state within a "void" called the false vacuum). What might
have preceded this moment at which the Universe springs into being and how the
singularity came to be (become) remains speculative; theoreticians in the
Sciences have proposed inventive, although somewhat abstract, solutions but the
alternative and traditional views of philosophers (metaphysicians) are still
taken seriously by many in the scientific community. This last idea is treated
again near the bottom of Page 20-11 and a link to some of the writer's
speculations. This is an appropriate point to
insert comments about what the writer has recently learned about the concept of
the Instanton. This is an alternative version of the notion of the
Singularity described in previous paragraphs. The Instanton is a condition that
derives from Yang-Mills Gauge theory which is a part of what is known as Quantum
Chromodynamics (QCD). We will not further delve into that subject but will just
mention that Cosmologists such as Stephen Hawkings and Neil Turok have adapted
Instanton theory to the conceptualizing of what was before and led up to the Big
Bang, or any of the competing ideas for the Universe's inception. In a nutshell,
they envision a process by which a quantum fluctuation in the vacuum or void
prior to the initiation of the Big Bang led to the appearance of energy by a
quantum tunneling process. Their "Pea Instanton", which had such high
temperatures and pressures that it had to "explode" was created in this way.
Rather than pursue this topic further here, we refer you to the Cambridge
University link at the bottom of the Preface and to these two additional Web
sites: (1) and
(2). Many scientists believe that what
may have "existed" prior to the Universe was a quantum state (in a sense,
analogous to the condition of "potency" in ancient Greek philosophy) which
influenced a true vacuum (no matter whatsoever) that somehow possessed a high
level of energy (of unknown nature but not, however, as photon radiation).
Countless quantum fluctuations (which in quantum theory are said not to
depend on [obey] metaphysical cause/effect controls and are not subject
to time ordering) in this vacuum energy density produced sets of virtual
particles and anti-particles (analogs to positrons, the positively-charged
equivalent of an electron; neutrons and anti-neutrons, etc) that came into
existence for very brief moments and then annihilated. But, rarely, annihilation
did not occur, so that a particle could grow and trigger a 'phase
transition' that led to the singularity from whence all that entails the
Universe - matter, energy, space, and time - came into being. In this quantum
model, it is conceivable that many such singularities could form from time to
time, leading to mulitple universes that, as far as we know theoretically,
cannot have any direct contact.
This is one example of prohibition
by relativistic limits, in which information travelling at the speed of light
cannot reach us from beyond the horizon - outer edge - of our own observable
universe. The concept of the Cosmological Horizon refers to the boundary
or outer limits of the Universe that we can establish contact with. This is
approximated by the currently observed farthest galaxies that formed in the
first billion years of cosmic time. This Horizon is also conceptualized as the
surface dividing spacetime (which includes all locatable 4-dimensional points)
into what we can see and measure from what is hidden and unobservable. The
observable therefore must lie within our Light Cone, an imaginary surface
that encloses all possible paths of light reaching us since the beginning of
time. (The second illustration below is an example). Check page 20-10 for further
discussion of these ideas.
The controlling factor in this
"visual" awareness is just the speed of light (photons). If the Universe is
about 14 billion years old (in terms of our terrestrial perception of time,
based on a complete revolution of Earth around the Sun), then light leaving just
formed protogalaxies near the observable limit of the Universe departed some 13+
billion years ago but this radiation is only now reaching us, since it had to
traverse across a Universe that was expanding (ever increasing distances) and
drawing the protogalaxies away from us. (We actually have detected cosmic
background radiation [see page 20-9], which pervades the entire Universe, whose
first appearance was only about 300,000 years since the beginning of the B.B. -
this is the present longest-term limit to the lookback time involved, thus
peering into the past to find the earliest discernible event). A distinction
must be made between observed and observable: as will be discussed
in detail on pages 20-8 and 20-9, there is strong reason to believe that the
real Universe is (much?) larger, but part lies beyond the present limits of
observation. As time moves through the future, the horizon will move into ever
more of the ultimate Universe.
A corollary: In the Standard Model
for the Big Bang, there have been and are parts of the Universe which cannot
directly influence each other because there hasn't been enough time for light
from one part to have reached the other. Thus, the 'horizon' relative to Earth
as the observing point (but any other position in the Universe is equally as
valid an observing point) refers to the spatial or time limit that demarcates
between what we can establish contact with in any part of the Universe and what
lies beyond. This figure illustrates an extreme example of parts that cannot
mutually communicate:
Let astronomers look out towards
the apparent limits to the "outer" Universe, say at a distance of 13 billion
light years, in two opposite directions. We, at the center of this diagram,
would assume that the galaxies at the opposing edges are 26 billion light years
apart. But for a 14 billion year old Universe, and radiation from each set of
galaxies traveling at the speed of light, a signal from one galaxy group would
not have had enough time to penetrate well beyond US into the region of space on
the other side. Thus, there is no (time for) communication between one part of
the Universe and various other parts. This is true throughout a Universe whose
dimensions are equivalent to a 28 billion light-year diameter sphere (not
necessarily the real shape of the Universe, but an adequate means to visualize
the collection of objects in the observable part of the Universe). Within this
sphere, there are pockets of space that are not in touch with other pockets. (A
pocket of the pervasive Cosmic Background Radiation, for example, that covers
about 2° of the sky hemisphere above us on Earth does not interact with
radiation beyond it as the Universe continues to expand.) This seeming paradox is called the
"Horizon problem". Simply stated: how can these isolated regions have very
similar properties (such as similar densities of dark matter, Cosmic Background
Radiation, and numbers of galaxies) if they are not in contact. This appears to
violate the fundamental principle of universal causality, which holds
that during expansion all parts of the Universe would need to have been in
communication (by light transfer or other means of exchanging energy) so that
the fundamental principles of physics would have ample causal opportunity to
influence each other. This is seemingly necessary if at a gross scale the
Universe is to maintain uniformity (the essence of the Cosmological Principle
which postulates broad homogeneity and isotropism). One explanation that
accounts for the causality needed to obey this Principle is given below in the
subsection dealing with Inflation.
Nevertheless the isolation of
regions of the Universe from one another is a real fact, as evident in the above
illustration. And, specifically there were situations whereby some parts of the
Universe were not in causal contact shortly after the Big Bang, and thus not
visible to one another during early cosmic history, but will eventually as
expansion proceeds become known to each other. Consider the diagram below:
Commenting further on the
Universe's geometry: One view holds the present Universe to be finite but
without boundaries; its temporal character is such that it had a discrete
beginning but will keep on existing and growing into the infinite future (unless
there is sufficient [as yet undiscovered] mass to provide gravitational forces
that slow the expansion and eventually cause contraction [collapse]). A much
different model considers the Universe to be infinite in time and space - it
always was and always will be (philosphically, there are concepts that equate
God as an "intellectual presence" distributed throughout this naturalistic
Universe). These and other important ideas - whether the Universe's shape is
analogous to spherical, hyperbolic, or flat; whether it is open or closed,
whether it is presently decelerating or accelerating, and whether it is infinite
or finite in time and space - are treated in detail on pages 20-8, 20-9, and
20-10.
The next figure is a
spacetime diagram that summarizes the history of the expanding and
evolving Universe in terms of what is popularly known today as the general or
Standard Big Bang (B.B.) model for its inception. (It received its
descriptive name as a derisive comment from the astronomer Fred Hoyle, then
precept of expansion, who advocated instead a Universe of constant size as
described in his Steady State model; variants of this and other models have been
put forth, as described on page 20-9). Simply stated,
the Standard Big Bang model holds the Universe to have expanded from a
infinitesimally small point. In essence, the Big Bang is the creation
event that started the Universe and determined its ultimate course of
evolution through the state now observed and into its long term (perhaps
infinite) future.
A variation of this figure which
gives a summary of energy levels and temperatures for the evolutionary history
of the Universe is too big for this page. You can access it by clicking here.
Note that most temperatures are expressed in energy equivalents as eV's or
electron volts (GeV refers to Giga-electron volts). To return to the present
page, you will need to hit the X button on the upper right of the screen that
comes up with your browser.
The Big Bang as an
expansion theory traces its roots to ideas proposed by A. Friedmann in 1922 to
counter ideas attendant to Albert Einstein's Theory of General Relativity, from
which that titan had derived a model of a static, non-expanding, eternal
universe (he eventually abandoned this model as evidence for expansion was
repeatedly verified and he realized his General Relativity proved very germane
to the expansion models). The Abbe George Lemaitre (a Belgian priest) in 1927
set forth another expansion model that started with his proposed "Primeval (or
Primordial) Atom", a hot, dense, very small object that resembles the
"singularity", a term more widely accepted. The nature of a Big Bang was refined
and embellished by G. Gamow and others in the 1930s. Confirming evidence for
expansion came from Edwin Hubble in the late 1920s. The Big Bang can be mentally
related to the above-mentioned singularity by imagining that the
expansion is run in reverse (like playing a film backwards): all materials that
now appear as though moving outward (as space itself expands) would, if reversed
in direction, then appear to ultimately converge on a "point of origin" that is
represented by the singularity.
As described later in
this Section (page 20-9),
the B.B. concept drew its principal support from the observations by Edwin
Hubble and others on radiation redshifts associated with the distribution of
galaxy velocities. The Universe has been enlarging ever since this first abrupt
explosion, with space expanding, and galaxies drawing apart, so that the size of
the knowable part of this vast collection of galaxies, stars, gases, and dust is
now measured in billions of light years (representing the distances reached by
the fastest moving material [near the speed of light] since the moment of the
Big Bang [14 to 15 billion years ago]). This age or time since inception is
determined from the Hubble Constant H (which may change its value) which is
derived from the slope of a plot of distance (to stellar or galactic sources of
light) versus the velocity of each source (see page 20-9).
Aside from quantum
speculation, nothing is really known about the state of the Universe-to-be just
prior to the initiation of the Big Bang (a moment known as the Planck
Epoch). The Laws and the 20 or so fundamental parameters or factors that
control the observed behavior of all that is seeable in the Universe
become the prevailing reality at the instant of the Big Bang, but Science cannot
as yet account for the "why" of their particular formulation and values, i.e.,
what controls their specifics and could they have come into existence
spontaneously without any external originator, the "Creator" or "Designer".
Among these conditions that had to be "fine-tuned" just right is this partial,
but very significant list: homogeneity and isotropy of the Universe (the
Cosmological Principle); relative amount of matter and anti-matter; the H/He and
H/deuterium ratios; the neutron/proton ratio; the degree of chaos at the outset;
the balance between nuclear attraction and electric repulsion; the optimal
strength of gravity; the decay history of initial particles; the total number of
neutrinos produced early on; the eventual mass density which affects the
Critical Density; the specific (but varying) rates of expansion after the Big
Bang; the delicate balance between Temperature and Pressure, both during the
first moments, and much later during star formation; the ability within stars to
produce carbon - essential to life; and much more. (See also another list at the
bottom of page 20-11a.)
Some of these are interdependent but the important point is that if the
observed values of these parameters/factors were to differ by small to moderate
degrees, the Universe that we live in could almost certainly not have led to
conditions that eventually fostered intelligent life capable of evolving during
the history of the Universe as we know it. (Also presumably necessary: beings
that can attest to the Universe's existence and properties by making
observations and deductions that lead to knowledge of the Universe; this
requires the eventual appearance of "conscious reasoning" at least at the level
conducted by humans on Earth, and perhaps also human-like creatures existing
elsewhere in the Universe, - this concept is one of the tenets in what is
referred to as the "Anthropic Principle").
At the moment of the Universe's
conception, gravity, matter, and energy all co-existed in some incredibly
concentrated form (but capable of supporting fields of action)
that cannot be adequately duplicated or defined by experiment on Earth since it
requires energy at levels of at a minimum 1019 GeV (Giga-electron
volts; "Giga" refers to a billion; one electron-volt is the energy acquired by a
single electron when accelerated through a potential drop of one volt; 1 eV =
1.602 x 10-12 ergs); 1019 GeV is vastly greater than
currently obtainable on Earth by any controllable process (presently, the upper
limit obtained experimentally in high energy physics labs (with their large
particle accelerators and colliders is ~103 GeV). Best postulates
consider the singularity (whatever its origin) at this instant to be governed by
principles underlying quantum mechanics, have maximum order (zero entropy [see
page 20-8]), and be
multidimensional (i.e., greater than the four dimensions - three spatial and one
in time - that emerged at the start of spacetime as the Big Bang got underway).
Quantum theory does not rule out discrete "things" (some form of energy or
matter) to have existed prior to the inception of the Planck Epoch; on the other
hand, this existence is not required or necessary. But, as implied above and
discussed in detail on page 20-10, "fluctuations" within
possible energy fields in a pre-Universe quantum state (an abstract but
potentially real condition that runs counter to philosophical notions of
"being") may have been the triggering factor that started the B.B.
This theory allows
cosmologists to begin the Universe at a parameter called the Planck time
, given as 10-43 seconds (what happened or existed at even
earlier time is not knowable with the principles of physics developed to this
day). At that instant, the Universe must have been at least as small at
10-35 meters - the Planck length (about the same size as a
string in superstring theory [see below]). At the initiation of the Big Bang,
the four fundamental forces (gravity, and the strong [nuclear], weak
[radioactivity], and electromagnetic [radiation] forces, referred to
collectively as the Superforce) that held the Universe together existed
momentarily (until about 10-32 sec) in a special physical state that
obeyed the conditions imposed by one meaning of the term Symmetry***. During this fraction of a
second interval, gravity then was as strong as the other forces. Its tendency to
hold the singularity together had to be overcome by the force that activated the
Big Bang. The onset of fundamental force separation may have been tied to the
force driving Inflation (see below).
But gravity thereafter rapidly
decreased in relative strength so that today at the atomic scale it is 2 x
10-39 weaker than the electrical force between a proton and an
electron (according to one recent theory, gravity remains strong until about
10-19 seconds). However, since the forces between protons (positive)
and electrons (negative) are neutralized (balanced) in ordinary matter, the now
much weaker gravitational forces are the major residual force that persists and
acts to hold together collective macro-matter (at scales larger than atoms,
specifically those bodies at rest or in motion subject to and described by
Newton's Laws; includes those aspects of movements of planets, stars, and
galaxies that can be treated non-relativistically). And gravity has the
fortunate property of acting over very long distances (decreasing as the inverse
square law). Although we think of gravity as the most pervasive force acting
within the Universe, there is growing evidence that some form of gravity-like
force also resides within an atom's nucleus but extends its effects over very
short (atomic scale) distances.
The non-gravity forces that
separated from the gravitational force are described by the still developing
Grand Unified Theory or GUT, which seeks to explain how they
co-existed. The GUT itself is a subset of the Theory of Everything
(TOE) which, when it is finally worked out, will specify a single force
or condition (or, metaphysically, a state of Being) that describes the
situation at the very inception of the Universe. Thus, TOE unites the gravity
field with the quantum field within the singularity that emerged as separate
entities almost instantaneously at the start of the Big Bang. The TOE speculates
on what may have existed or happened prior to the Big Bang, based on both
quantum principles and belief that some other type of [pre-Bang] physics yet to
be developed governed the pre-Universe void. At the Planck time, the four
fundamental forces are said to be united (the Unified Epoch). The flow chart
below (see also the third figure below) specifies the major components of each
of the forces as they are assumed to exist after the first minute of the Big
Bang. When unified at the outset of the Big Bang, they are presumed to exist in
a state shown by the ? (whose nature and properties are still being
explored theoretically; at present this condition cannot be produced
experimentally because of the huge energies [way beyond present capabilities in
laboratories] involved).
One model, now gaining some favor, based on Superstring theory (see last
paragraph on this page) contends that at the first moment of the Big Bang (at
the 10-43 sec mark; before which any singularity or other state of
existence cannot yet be described by present physics) the Universe-to-be
consisted of 10 dimensions. As the process of the Universe's birth starts, six
of those dimensions collapse (but presently exist on microscales as small as
10-32 centimeters) and the remaining four (three spatial; one time)
enlarged to the Universe of today. The behavior of these forces in the
earliest moments of the Big Bang was critical to the construction and
development of the Universe as we perceive it today. Gravity in particular
controls the ultimate fate of the Universe's expansion (see below) and formation
of stars and galactic clusters. (According to Einsteinian Relativity, gravity,
which we intuitively perceive as attractive forces between masses, is a
fundamental geometric property of spacetime that depends closely on the
curvature of space, such that concentrations of matter can "bend" space itself;
Einstein and others have predicted the existence of gravitational waves that
interact with matter; see the Preface for additional treatment). For all its
importance, it is surprising that gravity is by far the weakest of the four
primary forces; its role in keeping macro-matter together and controlling how
celestial bodies maintain their orbits is just that it becomes the strong,
action-at-a-distance force left whenever the other forces are electrically
neutral and have influence only out to very short distances.
Between 10-36 and 10-33 sec (a minuscule but
vital interval of time - about a billionth of a trillionth of a trillionth earth
seconds - referred to as the Inflationary Stage) a mechanism to explain
certain properties of the Universe was first proposed by Alan Guth, then at
Princeton University), to explain some aspects of the Universe [see below]; that
were serious difficulties in the Standard Model. The theory holds that the
nascent and still minute Universe underwent a major phase change
(probably thermodynamic) in which repulsion forces caused a huge exponential
increase in the rate of expansion of space. Through this brief moment
(approximately a trillionth of a trillion of a trillionth [10-36] of
a second), the micro-Universe grew from an infinitesimal size (but still
containing all the matter and energy [extremely dense] that was to become the
Universe as it is now) to that of a grapefruit or perhaps even a pumpkin (an
upper size limit is given as a meter). This is an expansion factor that may have
been between 1050 and 1078 (this is the range of
uncertainty, although some theoreticians choose 1050 as the more
likely number). Or, using another analogy, this is equivalent to increasing the
size of the proton (~10-13 cm) to roughly the size of a sphere
10,000,000 times the Solar System's diameter (arbitrarily, taken as the distance
from the Sun to the far orbital position of Pluto, or ~5.9 x 109 km).
This extreme growth determined the eventual spatial curvature of the present
Universe (in the most "popular" model, tending towards "flat"). This next
diagram illustrates the extreme growth of the incipient Universe during the
Inflationary moment (both horizontal and vertical scales are in powers of ten);
in the version shown, the Big Bang expansion is shown as decelerating over time
but a vital modification is discussed on page page 20-10.
Within this inflationary period,
temperatures dropped drastically. During this critical moment, the physical
conditions that led to the present Universe were preordained. The driving force
behind this huge "leap" in size (which has happened at this extreme rate only
once in Universe history) is postulated by some as a momentary state of gravity
as a repulsive (negative) force (perhaps equivalent to Einstein's once-defunct
Cosmological Constant but in a new form: forces related to fundamental particles
such the Higgs boson or the postulated "Inflaton") that powered
this tremendous expansion. Either particle is associated with a field (spatial
region over which the force is said to operate; the force normally diminishes
progressively with distance to the particle).
The source of the energy that drove
Inflation has not been precisely identified but one theory ascribes this to
potential energy within the quantum field of the Inflaton. Another hypothesis is
that the energy was derived during the separation of gravitational force from
the remaining three forces (see third diagram below). This may have released a
huge amount of energy capable of bringing about the repulsion that marks the
brief moments of inflation (see paragraphs on page 20-10 that describe
Einstein's Cosmological Constant which depends on a similar repulsive energy
related to an as yet undiscovered but apparently real "dark energy"). During the
miniscule inflationary period, different parts of the still "empty" void (energy
existed but the first particles that would form matter had not yet appeared and
organized) separated at a rate greater than the speed of light - in effect, it
was this initial evolving dimensionality or space that was expanding.
(Recent discoveries indicate that the Universe is now undergoing a second but
relatively much slower rate of accelerating expansion that has turned around the
post Big Bang gravitationally-mandated deceleration, beginning at some [still
undetermined] stage [probably prior to the last 7 billion years] of the
Universe's growth; see page 20-10.)
During inflation, as gravity began
to act independently, gravitational waves were produced that had a
critical bearing on the minute but vital variations in distribution of
temperatures (and matter) in the subsequent history of the Universe as we know
it. As time proceeded, gravity then reverted to the attractive force that took
over control of further expansion. Specifically, a metastable state called the
false vacuum - devoid of matter per se but containing some kind of
energy - underwent a decay or phase change by quantum processes to a momentary
energy density that produces the negative pressure capable of powering the
inflation. Inflation continues until the false vacuum potential (which starts
out as positive when its associated density field is zero), which initiated the
expansion, drops to zero (now with a positive field that has varied in space and
time).
Advantages of the Inflationary
model are that it sets the stage for the "creation" of matter, it accounts for
the apparent "flatness" of the Universe's shape, and helps to explain its
large-scale homogeneity and isotropy (smoothness). Before the Inflation began
this uniformity condition (homogeneity( existed, with the initial conditions in
causal contact, and was subsequently "frozen in" to the Universe by the rapidity
of inflationary expansion. Thus, prior to the moment of Inflation, all parts of
the singularity were in communication with one another and their properties were
coordinated. As Inflation proceeded, the components moved apart at a much faster
rate that exceeded the speed of light, so that during this time communication
was lost. But the previous uniformity was largely maintained during expansion.
Since then the components of the Universe (e.g., galaxies) in some parts of the
Universe have been regaining communications with other parts (we can now confirm
our role/place in this by the ability of the most powerful telescopes to see out
towards the edge of the Universe). However, the model suggests that during
inflation, energy may not have been perfectly uniformly distributed, producing
narrow zones of greater concentration called "cosmic strings". These, during the
following slower expansion, served as the irregularities which eventually led to
concentrations of matter that localized into the early Universe structure around
which the first galaxies formed. The slight departures from homogeneity also
show up in the variations detected in the Cosmic Background Radiation (CBR, also
referred to as Cosmic Microwave Radiation [CMR], see page 20-9).
Inflation also seems to solve the
above-mentioned "horizon problem" (recall that horizon refers to the
sections of the Universe that are limited in their interactions [causal contact]
by the distances photons can travel at light speed during the interval of time
in which a cosmological phenomenon is being considered). This problem is present
in this diagram:
In this diagram parts of the
Universe seem to lie outside these horizon limits. This simple diagram may help
to better visualize this:
Such distant parts are not now in
contact with one another (do not exchange light signals) and would seem causally
independent. But this isolation, which appears to defy causality, in the
Inflation model gets around this by 1) assuming these and all parts were in
contact in that miniscule fraction of the Universe's first second before
Inflation, and thus 2) had inherited, or "locked in" the co-ordinating physics
underlying the Universe's operations that subsequently preserved general
uniformity as the Universe went through its huge inflationary expansion.
A good summary of the essence and
history of Inflation is at a Web site prepared by John Gribbin.
Although theoretical calculations
and certain experiments seem to be confirming the essential points in the
Inflation model, not every cosmoscientist has come to accept this innovative
explanation of the earliest moments of the Universe and the consequences of its
subsequent history that inflation seems to predict. In the past few years, some
have turned their attention to alternate models. Most striking in its departure
is the Varying speed of Light (VSL) model first espoused by Dr. Joao Magueijo in
1995, who later joined forces with Dr. Andreas Albrecht when they collaborated
at the Imperial College in London. The essence of VSL is that during roughly the
same time in the first B.B. second that Inflation would have operated, at this
earliest moment the intense energy being release would cause the speed of light
to be greater than today's value. That speed, ever decreasing, would then
converge on the now constant value today, thus meeting Einstein's fundamental
posit that this speed is constant. Magueijo and Albrecht have calculated that
this phenomenon of rapidly dropping speed in these early instances can produce
most of the same outcomes that the spatial expansion of Inflation leads to.
Initially largely rejected by his colleagues, recent observations of possible
light speed changes in the post B.B. Universe, if confirmed, have refocused
attention on VSL. Like Inflation, VSL remains hard to prove since its essential
characteristics occur under physical conditions that are still near-impossible
to duplicate experimentally. Stay tuned. Returning to the progression of
physical events after Inflation but within the first minute of the B.B.: As
described above, during the first fraction of a second following the Planck
moment incredible events unfolded in rapid succession that led to release of
kinetic energy that powered the Universe's development and created the initial
stages of radiation. From the radiation associated with this energy, matter was
formed (an E = mc2 transformation)(in the first minute some of the
matter decayed back into radiation, releasing neutrinos and other particles).
These primitive forms of matter rapidly organized into a myriad of elementary
particles. They fall into two broad classes:
I) the FERMIONS: all
particles with quantum spins of 1/2 of odd whole numbers such as 1, 3, 5
(includes protons, electrons, neutrons); they all obey the Pauli Exclusion
Principle which states that no two different particles can have the same values
of the four quantum numbers. Fermions can be divided into subgroups: 1) the
heavier Hadrons (minute particles, consisting of certain quark
combinations held together by gluons permitting strong interactions within
atomic nuclei), further subdivided into (a) the Baryons (combinations of
three quarks [see 4th paragraph below on this page] that include the familiar
protons and neutrons (each about 10-13 cm in size
[compared with diameters on the order of 10-8 cm for the classical
Bohr atom]) and (b) the Mesons (short-lived heavier particles) families,
and 2) the Leptons, even tinier discrete particles that are weakly
interacting (that are represented by electrons, tauons,
muons, and three types of neutrinos (electron-neutrino;
tau-neutrino; muon-neutrino; the discovery of the latter two imply that the
neutrino may have a small mass, and if proved could account for some of the
missing matter in the Universe talked about later in this Section), and
II) BOSONS, the force
carrying messenger particles; these have unit [1] spins. Best known of the
bosons are the 1) photons (which have zero rest mass) that are quanta **** of radiant energy responsible
for electromagnetic (EM) forces which travel at light speed as oscillatory
(sinusoidal) waves and 2) the gluons that bind the nucleus by mitigating
against the strong repelling forces therein. A boson that theory says exists,
but as yet has not been "found" is 3) the graviton, which transfers the
force of gravity (also, at the speed of light).
Much of the above information is
summarized in the chart below. This classification of particles and their
interactions is an integral part of the Standard Model for the ways in
which matter is put together, which applies to any Big Bang scenario (without
the refinements of Inflation) that leads to a broadly homogeneous, isotropic
large-scale Universe and is an acceptable summary of what is verifiably known
now about the origin of matter and energy (with the caveat that the model is
subject to continual modification or revision).
Illustration produced by AAAS, taken from The Economist, Oct. 7-12, 2000, p.
96 In this classification, the major
entities are the fermions composed of quarks (elementary particles with
fractional charge that comprise protons, neutrons, and mesons), the leptons
(including the electron), and the bosons, force particles with finite (but very
small) mass. The gray field containing the quarks is the Baryon group. The quark
particles have generally been discovered and proved to exist from high energy
physics experiments using particle accelerators.
A variant of this classification,
which arranges the mass and force particles according to measured or estimated
mass of each type of particle is shown below. The chart emphasizes the growing
belief that mass itself is governed by the relative contribution from the Higgs
Boson.
Quarks were the first
(sub)particles to form during the early moments of the first minute. The
nomenclature for the 6 quarks (of which there are six types or "flavors" [up,
strange, etc. each subject to variants or "colors" ; various combinations of
quarks give rise to the different nucleons) are descriptive terms for
convenience and carry no special physical significance. Quarks have a baryon
number of +1/3, charge numbers of +2/3(up) and -1/3(down), and a spin quantum
number of 1/2. The two baryons familiar to most are made of three quarks: the
proton consists of two up (each +2/3) and one down quark (-1/3) for a net
charge of 1; the neutron two down and one up quark, for a net charge of 0
(zero). Mesons contain only two quarks. As a visual aid, this is
summarized in this diagram:
Quarks also can have a reverse
sign, thus they can organize into anti-protons and anti-neutrons. Other
combinations of quarks lead to more exotic particles; one group includes mesons,
which include members such as the pion Π-, consisting of an anti-up
quark (-u) and a (d) quark and the kaon K+ made up of a (u) and an
(-s) quark.
The leptons have much smaller
masses and are single particles (not containing the quark subparticles). They
are not influenced by the strong nuclear force but can interact through the weak
nuclear force. Three of the leptons (upper row) are neutrinos which have
extraordinary penetrating power (one can pass through the entire Earth without
interacting or changing); once thought to be massless, evidence now suggests a
very small mass.
The force particles (bosons) are
involved with the individual fundamental forces mentioned above. For example,
the gluon holds the nucleus of baryons together; z and w bosons control the weak
nuclear force; photons are the force carriers that are associated with
electromagnetic radiation; gravitons transmit the force of gravity. The Higgs
boson has not yet actually been proved to exist (but from theory is considered
almost certainly to be real); recent experiments in a European supercollider may
have witnessed a few genuine Higgs particles but confirmation will likely await
several new supercolliders capable of much higher energies due to come on line
before the end of the first decade in 2000. The Higgs boson is considered to be
the force particle that accounts for mass in the fundamental particles that have
that property. The Standard Model, when examined rigorously, is now considered only an
approximation to full reality in subatomic physics. It fails, for example, to
explain and integrate gravity. Theoreticians believe that gravity must have its
own boson which they have named the graviton. Although it most likely
exists in some form, its actuality has yet to be proved. It has not been found
during any of the current particle accelerator experiments (which are also
looking for the Higgs boson).
Now, returning to the
events of the first minute: By ~10-39 sec there was a fundamental
symmetry break that brought on a split between the GUT forces and the other
fundamental force known as gravity, dependent on the graviton (an
infinitesimal particle which has yet to be "discovered" or verified by
physicists). The history (pattern) of force dissociation during the first second
is depicted in this illustration:
The BIG BANG; The First Minute of the Universe;
Introductory Overview
The First Minute of Universe History
At 10-35 second there
was a further split of non-gravitational forces into the strong and the
electroweak (combination of weak and electromagnetic) forces; the electroweak
pairing then separated into today's EM and weak forces at about 10-10
sec. From 10-35 to 10-6 sec, matter consisted of the
subatomic particles known as quarks (Quark Era), and their binding
particles, the gluons, present but not yet involved in producing nucleons
(protons, neutrons). Temperatures were still too high (1028 °K) to
foster quark organization into these nucleons. By the start of this interval, at
the time when energy levels dropped to about 10-16 GeV, the GUT state
underwent dissociation into the strong nuclear force (binding nuclei) and the
electroweak force (itself an interactive composite of the electromagnetic and
weak forces). At about 10-9 sec, by which time temperatures had
fallen to ~1015 K, the weak nuclear force (involved in radioactive
decay) and the electromagnetic (EM) force (associated with photon radiation)
separated and began to operate independently. Then, by 10-6 seconds,
the six fundamental quarks had organized in combinations of 2 or 3 into hadrons
during the brief Hadron Era.. Protons formed by this time remained stable
but some neutrons produced later experienced decay into protons and electrons.
This Era was followed at 10-4 seconds, lasting up to one second or
so, by the emergence of electrons, neutrinos and other leptons (Lepton
Era). Thus, prior to 10-6 seconds, quarks had formed almost
exclusively, but by the end of the first second of time they were greatly
reduced in number as free (unorganized) particles, even as hadrons, leptons
(especially neutrinos) and photons (the particle carriers of electromagnetic
energy) were becoming the dominant products despite extensive electron-positron
and baryon-antibaryon annihilation. As electrons emerged, some reacted with
protons to form neutrons, releasing neutrinos. From this point on, the ratio of
baryons to photons is 1 to a billion (a similar number holds for the ratio of
baryons to neutrinos).
From the GUT stage
onward, both matter and antimatter were being created (baryogenesis). By
10-4 sec both quark particles and antiparticles (with opposite
charges, e.g., at the lepton level an anti-electron or positron would have a +
charge) that had earlier coexisted had now interacted by mutual annihilation.
Neutrinos and antineutrinos released by proton-electron reactions also
experienced this destruction. So, at this moment only a residue of elementary
particles survived - (almost?) all antiparticles apparently were completely
wiped out leaving only some of the numerically larger amounts of particles.
Annihilation is an extremely efficient process for releasing the maximum amount
of energy when positrons and electrons meet - destruction of a pair generates
106 electron volts. During the annihilation phase, a great quantity
of high energy gamma ray radiation and other energetic photons produced from the
interactions comes to dominate the particles in the incipient Universe.
By 10-3 seconds, the
temperature had now dropped to 1014 K and the proto-Universe had a
diameter roughly the size of our present Solar System. In the next few seconds,
temperatures dropped below a level where further antiparticle production took
place in abundance. The particles making up the Universe today represent the
excess over the few surviving antiparticles. Most of the latter would have
concentrated in near empty space outside any cluster of matter (stars, galaxies,
gas clouds, etc.) - if antiparticles still co-exist in significant amounts with
the particles we deal with on Earth or in the denser cosmic world, the effects
of destruction might be detectable; no evidence that this is going on to a
noticeable degree has been found.
At the 1 second stage,
the Universe had already expanded ***** to a diameter of about 1 to
10 light years even as its density had decreased to ~10 kg/cc [kilograms per
cubic centimeter], and its temperature had dropped to about 1010 K.
By this time all the fundamental particles (essential matter) now in the
Universe had be created, largely from the vast quantities of photons (energy
"fuel") released during the first second. As of the first minute, about 1 free
neutron existed for every six protons, although all of these neutrons would
eventually combine with protons in isotopes and heavier elements. The general
excess of protons persisted, making those hydrogen atom nuclei then and still
the most prominent atomic species in the Universe. Neutrinos by now had appeared
in abundance as the energy released when protons combined with electrons. These
thereafter were decoupled from other matter.
The search goes on for convincing
proof of the full nature of the neutrinos that are often the energy particle
released from weak force nuclear reactions that took place at very high
temperatures. They are abundant today (~100 million of them for every atom in
the Universe), with most coming from production during the first minute, and
some from stellar reactions. Being without charge (and with an energy of 0.001
eV) and massless or nearly so, these particles do not readily interact with
matter. They pass easily through your body, or even through the entire Earth,
because the likelihood of collisions is very small. They are thus very hard to
detect (and thus prove their existence); elaborate experiments using huge tanks
containing water or other hydrogen compounds have so far recorded only a few
possible neutrino interactions. However, they are important in the high
temperature processes of the initial minutes of the Big Bang because they are
factors in some of the possible reactions, especially in the formation of
helium, and thus helped to determine the relative abundances of H, He, Li, and
Be - those elements that mark the initial composition of the material
Universe. Much of what is known about events,
conditions, and sequences during the first minute of the Universe has been
surmised from theoretical hypotheses and calculations. Experimental
verification, particularly during the earlier moments in this critical minute,
has been limited because, as they were taking place, the energies involved were
huge - well beyond the capabilities of even the most powerful particle
accelerators and other means of directly observing particle behavior. However,
in February, 2000 an announcement from CERN in Geneva claims (as yet unverified
by other labs) to have reproduced conditions equivalent to the first microsecond
(10-6 sec) of the Big Bang. Accelerators hurled lead atoms in a beam
that struck lead or gold targets at tremendous velocities. Momentarily,
temperatures at the collision point reached 100,000 times that of the Sun's
interior (~1.5 billion °C), at which the physicists interpreting the experiment
believe the plasma emanating from the contact zone was composed, for a very
brief instant, of quarks and gluons. These quickly combined into protons,
neutrons, and electrons as the heated material dissipated. New colliders,
generating at least 10 times more energy, will be coming on line by 2000 and
subsequent years, so that relevant new experiments will likely confirm the
theoretical models that describe the history of the later part of the first
minute. Energies comparable to those extant during the first moments are so
great that no appropriate experimental setup is feasible for the foreseeable
future, and may never be attainable in physics labs on Earth. We close this part of the page by
commenting on some other topics in Big Bang expansion. Newer models treating
aspects of the physics and mechanisms of expansion during the first fraction of
a second of the Big Bang have been proposed (see below) and the theory behind
each is currently being tested experimentally. We will cite and briefly describe
three of the most intriguing at the moment, but will forego any in-depth
explanation:
1) Primordial Chaos: which
postulates that in the earliest stages of the Big Bang the distribution and
behavior of matter and energy in the incipient Universe was notably disordered
and inhomogeneous, irregular, and turbulent, with variations in temperature and
other scalar (non-directional) properties, anisostropic expansion rates, and
other disturbances in the initial conditions within various parts of the rapidly
changing microverse (a variant, called the Mixmaster model, considers the
expansion to oscillate into a few momentary contractions at the outset); as the
Universe grew both during Inflation and afterwards, these irregularities were
smoothed out, leading to the gross isotropy of the present Universe; one version
assumes a cold rather than very hot initial state;
2) Supersymmetry: a symmetry
property which states that for every fermion (quantum spin of 1/2) there must be
a corresponding force-carrying boson (quantum spin of 1), called a
sparticle of the appropriate kind; likewise each boson has a
corresponding fermion sparticle; thus, in this model the number of particles is
doubled; the concept predicts that there must be some subatomic particles still
to be discovered if this pairing is valid); it also aids in simplifying the
broken symmetry problems that beset the Standard Model; and
3) Extra Dimensions : such
as those associated with Superstring theory; (last paragraph). The extremely hot, dense "soup" of
matter and energy that began in the first minute is often described as the
"primeval fireball". It has been likened to something akin to a thermonuclear
fusion event, yielding a detonation-like release of energy on a grandiose
scale that is just hinted at by a hydrogen bomb's explosion. This is a misnomer
because hydrogen atoms did not exist as such in the early Universe. The energy
release would not be visible (such radiation is characteristic of much lower
temperature processes) but the fireball "glow" would radiate at very short
wavelengths (gamma rays among them). This so-called invisible fireball cooled as
the Universe expanded. Its existence is equated with that of the Cosmic
Background Radiation, the remnant of the initial (and small) 'fireball'
consisting of the radiation and matter of the first eras.
Over the next 10 to 100 seconds
after the first minute, during the first stage of the Nucleosynthesis
Epoch, the predominant process was the production of stable nuclei
(nucleons) of hydrogen and helium. Some of the protons (p+) and
electrons (e-) that survived initial annihilation combined to produce
new neutrons (n) by weak force interactions, which added to the supply of
remaining hadronic neutrons. During this stage, at first the dominant atomic
nucleus was just a single proton (hydrogen of A=1). The basic fusion processes
that formed hydrogen and helium isotopes are shown in this diagram:
As temperatures dropped below
109 °K (at ~ 3 minutes), some of the neutrons started combining with
available protons (hydrogen nuclei) to form deuterons (heavy hydrogen or
H2 nuclei) plus gamma (γ) rays (resulting from the conservation of
the binding energy released in the reaction). When a neutron is captured at
lower temperatures, the assemblage is a deuterium atom (presently, ~1 such atom
per 30000 hydrogen atoms is the survival ratio; since deuterium is not produced
in most stars, the deuterium we find on Earth [isolated from heavy water
molecules] is thought to be a remnant from the first seconds of the Big Bang);
the amount detected provides a good theoretical control on the nuclear processes
acting during the early Big Bang. A much smaller fraction of the deuterium can
capture a second neutron to form the more unstable H3 or tritium.
Reaction between a deuteron and and
a proton can produce helium (He3). The much more abundant
He4 (two protons; two neutrons) is generated in several ways: by
reactions between two deuterons, between H3 and a proton (rare),
between He3 and a neutron, or between two He3 nuclei plus
a released proton. Two other elements are also nucleosynthesized in this early
stage in very small quantities: Lithium (Li; 3 protons; 4 neutrons):
He4 + H3 --> Li7 + γ and Beryllium (Be; 4
protons + 3 neutrons): He4 + He4 --> Be8 +
e- (under the still high temperatures during nucleosynthesis, most of
this highly unstable Be decays to Li). The general time line for formation of
these elements during primary nucleosynthesis appears in this next diagram which
plots mass numbers of the primordial isotopes. In it, the abundance of the
hydrogen proton is arbitrarily set at 1 - it is set to remain constant in the
ensuing processes in which the other nucleons develop as temperatures drop in
the relative abundances shown.
Elements with higher atomic numbers
(Z) are not produced at all during this initial nucleosynthesis because of
energy barriers at Z = 5 (boron) and Z = 8 (oxygen); also the statistical
probability of two nucleons of just the right kind meeting is quite low. This
stability gap is overcome in stars by the fusion of 3 He4 nuclei into
a single C12 nucleus. The higher atomic number elements through iron
are created in more massive stars as they contract and experience rising
temperatures by a complexity of fusion processes such as helium nuclei capture,
proton capture, and reactions between resulting higher N nuclei themselves.
Elements with atomic numbers higher than iron are produced largely by neutron
capture processes. (See page 20-7 for more details on these various processes.)
Thus, this brief era witnessed the
synthesis of the primordial nuclear constituents -- ~90% hydrogen/deuterium and
10% helium by numbers of particles and 75-25% by mass -- that make up the two
elements subsequently dominating the Universe, along with minute amounts of
lithium and boron. Most helium was produced at this early time, but younger
helium is also the product of hydrogen burning in stars; the ratio of He/H has
remained nearly constant because about as much new He is then created in star
fusion as is converted to heavier elements during stellar evolution. The
hydrogen and helium nuclei generated in this critical time span of the original
nucleosynthesis later became the basic building materials for stars, which in
turn are the sites of the internal stellar nucleosynthesis (fusion) that
eventually spawned the elements with atomic numbers (symbol = Z, whose value is
the unique number of protons in the nucleus of a given element) up to 26 (Fe or
iron); these account for the dominant elements, in terms of both mass and
frequency, in the Universe (elements with Z > 26 are produced in other ways
that require energy input rather than release [as occurs for elements of Z <
26], as described later). (More about the creation [formation] of the heavier
elements is covered on page
20-7.) (An astounding fact, worthy of
prominent insertion at this point: The vast majority of the hydrogen atoms in
your body and mine, present as hydrogen-bearing substances, including water and
various organic compounds, throughout the Earth [and extrapolated in scale up to
the full content of the Universe] is primordial, that is, consists of the
same individual protons that formed in the first minute of the Big Bang and then
the nucleons of H during nucleosynthesis and the H atoms [single electron] soon
thereafter. The additional elements in our bodies, O, C, N, Ca, Na, Mg, K, Al,
Fe and others, were generated exclusively in stars, as we shall see later. We
therefore consist of truly old matter, billions of years in age, and are in a
sense "immortal" or "eternal". Although seemingly far-fetched, some of an
individual's atoms can conceivably end up in another human's body -
reincarnation of sorts - as atoms released during decay may migrate into the
food chain [although actual tracing of specific atoms through the transferrence
is next to impossible]; or a more direct path by cannabalism is an alternative
means.) As the fireball subsided with
continuing Universe expansion, the matter produced was dispersed in a still very
dense "soup" of predominantly x-ray photon radiation along with neutrinos plus
nucleons and other elementary particles (this mix of radiation, ionized H and He
nuclei, and free electrons is called a plasma). The time that lasted from
after the first few minutes to about 300,000 years (cosmic time, i.e., since the
moment of the Big Bang) is known as the Radiation Era (connoting the
dominance of electromagnetic radiation). As expansion proceeded, the
mass-equivalent radiation density (E = mc2 equivalency) decreased as
mass density increased (today, mass density significantly exceeds radiation
energy density even though the number of photons is much larger [in a
ratio of ~1 billion photons to every baryon]). Matter began to dominate after
~10000 years but temperatures remained too hot for electrons to combine with
nuclei. The Universe during this stage was opaque (in the sense that no visible
light passes from one point to the next) because even with decreasing photon
density detectable radiation at these wavelengths was prevented from traversing
or leaving the still enlarging fireball's confines owing to internal scattering
by free electrons.
This era of first opaqueness ended
roughly 380,000 years after the Big Bang (some recent estimates put this
termination at closer to 500,000 years after the B.B.) with the onset of the
Decoupling Era, at which stage cooling had dropped below 4,000° K,
allowing protons and helium nuclei to combine with electrons forming stable
hydrogen and helium atoms - a process known as Recombination). As
this era began, the Universe was about 1/200th its present size. Thereafter for
a time, the extreme decrease in numbers of free electrons (today there are about
one free proton and electron for every 100,000 atoms) drastically reduced
scattering (not by direct collision as occurs when sunlight hits dust but by
close interaction between the photon and electron or proton fields).
This atomic hydrogen absorbs
radiation at various wavelengths. In the visible, for example, the Universe
would appear as though it consisted primarily of a dark fog. For about 500,000
years more, this hydrogen acted as a kind of atomic "fog" which still kept the
Universe opaque (often referred to as a cosmic Dark Age). At this time, any
radiation within the fog would have extended into the ultraviolet. A glow would
be apparent at those wavelengths, since at that time the Cosmic Background
Radiation would give off UV light as it continued to redshift from preceding
shorter wavelengths enroute to its present-day microwave emission wavelengths
brought on by continuing expansion of space.
The Cosmic Background Radiation
(CBR)(discussed in detail on page 20-9) represents the
residual "afterglow" of the Big Bang - the once very hot thermal radiation that
has cooled thermodynamically to its present 2.73...°K value (detectable in the
microwave region). This radiation seems nearly isotropic in all directions from
which we observe the Universe. However, it does show tiny, but extremely
important deviations in temperature; the diagram below shown on page 20-9 is
reproduced here to illustrate this.
A small strip within this diagram
shows in more detail the distribution of these temperature variations.
These variations become extremely
important for the subsequent development of the Universe. Just how they formed
is still not fully known (again, check page 20-9). But they seem to have
developed during or just after Inflation. As the inflationary moments took place
and a Universe of very small but definite size resulted, variations in energy
density - which led to the temperature variations - resulted when the expansion
produced acoustic waves (analogous to the familiar sound waves but at much, much
longer wavelengths [lower frequencies]). These waves behave like acoustic waves
because they were propagated as alternating compressions and rarefactions of the
particles that had come into existence and spread out after the Inflation. Like
a traveling acoustic wave, those in the early expansion moved outward over times
at cosmic scales. Since the medium through which they moved was comparitively
tenuous (thin), their action required very high levels of energy (or power, to
use the term that includes time). Interferences led to the slight differences in
energy density that translate into the observed temperature difference. Assuming then that this acoustic
behavior describes the wave action in this expansion, then the spatial
distribution of the temperature variations can lead to what is known as a
power spectrum. Here is one derived from the WMAP data:
The horizontal axis plots the size
of the sky (celestial sphere) in terms of angular frequency. The vertical axis
shows variations of temperature in the millionths of a degree scale. At larger
scales (c) (angular frequency equivalent to 30° but calculated in radians), the
deviations from an average are moderate. At the scale of (d), about 1°, the
variations are maximum. At smaller angular distances, the amount of temperature
variations decrease progressively. The entire curve has the shape of a power
spectrum plot. From an acoustic standpoint, the peak (d) is equivalent to the
acoustic "fundamental tone"; successive peaks (towards e) are overtones. The effect of this acoustical
behavior (influenced and modified by gravity waves) up through Recombination was
to redistribute baryons and photons produced after Inflation such that they
tended to concentrate in the acoustical troughs (analogous to rarefactions in
sound waves). This lead to very small, but higher temperatures in the peaks
compared with lower temperatures in the troughs. Dark matter (again, on page
20-9) also was of greater density in the peaks. The net result was that both
energy and matter densities became spatially distributed into regions of highs
and lows (but still very small variations from the overall norm) as seen in the
CBR diagram (interferences may account for the non-uniform patterns). The higher
density regions became the sites where the first stars and later galaxies
preferentially formed. As the first stars and
protogalaxies began to develop towards the end of the first half million years,
their strong outputs of electromagnetic radiation caused a Re-ionization
(removal of electrons) of the hydrogen that increased to the extent that the
earlier opaque (at visible wavelengths) Universe now became rather rapidly
transparent to radiation spanning those wavelengths. This allowed visible
light photons to pass through interstellar space, which is an almost perfect
vacuum, and by itself is black, i.e., does not give off luminous self-radiation
but does contain very low densities of photons and other particles (about 3
atoms per cubic meter). This transparency facilitates free passage from external
sources of visible wavelengths within any region of the Universe. (Evidence for
this re-ionization has been found so far not from visible light but by using UV
radiation to "see" quasars that formed in this period). Thus, as stars and
galaxies began to form, their thermal and other energy outputs would ionize the
interstellar hydrogen, allowing their light to appear as now detectable in the
visible range, so that the Universe at this stage started to show the stars as
individuals and clusters. This did not happen "all at once" but gradually as
galaxies formed and made their regions transparent; thus "holes" appeared
intermittently in the opaque early Universe letting light from the reionizing
process in galactic neighborhoods begin to spread through their surroundings as
the opaqueness progressively dissipated.
The Decoupling Era is estimated to
have lasted to perhaps as long as the first million years, although most of the
baryon-lepton recombination took place in the beginning years. The end of the
Decoupling Era was thus the end of the Dark Ages in Cosmology. As we will see in
the next page, during this period conditions turned favorable for the the
clustering of matter (slight increases in density) that eventually gave rise to
the organization of galaxies.
Let us summarize the above ideas,
plus several introduced in the next pages, with two diagrams. The first is a
variant of the above Silk diagram for the development of the Universe after the
Big Bang, as seen here:
The second has been produced on one
of the Websites mentioned in the Preface, the 21st Century Science course
developed by Dr. J. Schombert. Labeled on his site "The Birth of the Universe",
it serves to summarize much of what has been already introduced on this page,
but introduces the idea that Black Holes may have form at the very moment of
inception of matter. Black Holes (in this Section often abbreviated "B.H.") are
ubiquitous objects found mostly within galaxies (but some may exist in
intergalactic space). They are extremely dense, so much so that their
extraordinarily intense gravitational pull prevents radiation from escaping them
(exception: Hawking radiation) but also causes material around them to be pulled
into them, commonly generating huge amounts of energy release that can be
detected over the entire spectrum. They range in size from very small
(centimeters) to sizes on planetary scales (these latter are referred to as
Supermassive B.H.'s. Black Holes commmonly form from ultimate collapse of very
massive stars. Black Holes play an important - perhaps critical - role in
getting galaxies started and are thought to lie in the central region of most
(possibly all) galaxies.
Three additional comments are
appropriate here, now that the above ideas have given you a background
understanding within which they become relevant:
First, The terms "mass density" and
"energy density" have appeared several times in the above paragraphs. In the
initial moments of the Universe, radiation energy density was dominant. By the
time temperatures had fallen to ~10000 °K, when the Universe was about 1/10000
its present size, radiation mass density (remember the E = mc2
equivalency) became about equal to matter density. After the first second or so,
the mass density has come to exceed radiation density, despite the
aforementioned preponderance of photons over hadrons and leptons. Second, some recent
hypotheses contained in the concepts of Hyperspace consider the Universe
at the Planck time to have consisted of 10 dimensions [other models begin with
as many as 23 dimensions but these reduce to fewer dimensions owing to symmetry
and other factors]; the chief advantage of this multidimensionality lies in its
mathematical "elegance" which helps to simplify and unify the relevant equations
of physics. As the Big Bang then commenced, this general dimensionality split
into the 4 dimensions of the extant macro-Universe that underwent expansion and
6 dimensions that simultaneously collapsed into quantum space realms having
dimensions of around 10-32 centimeters in size. This rather abstruse
concept is explored in depth in the book Hyperspace by Michio Kaku
(Anchor Books).
The third comment considers
that the physical entities that make up both matter and energy may be smaller
than quarks and leptons; these are known as superstrings - one
dimensional subparticles (of minimum lengths estimated to be 10-34
meters - the so-called irreducible quantum of length (given the symbol
Is) - that vibrate at different frequencies and combine in various
ways (straight to looped; in bundles) to then make up the many different
fundamental particles. Each species of particle has its characteristic
vibrational frequency or harmonic) that are now known to exist or can be
reasonably postulated. Proof of superstrings existence has yet been to be
verified but theory favors their existence and they are consistent with quantum
physics. Moreover, they account well for some of the fundamental ideas and
properties of matter, including its behavior at, before, and after the Big Bang
(see page 20-11). Thus, superstrings constitute the ultimate makeup of particles
that are obvious to us as the inhabitants of 3-dimensional space. This diagram
may help to visualize a bit of the idea.
In addition to the 4th dimension
and implications for the nature of time, superstrings are tied to 6 (or in some
models 7) more curled dimensions whose spatial arrangement around a particle is
expressed by a curvature of radius R (probably very small - in the range of
Is or somewhat larger but one recent model allows R to be up to 1
millimeter). Superstrings therefore exist in hyperspace. If superstring theory
proves to be valid, it will be one of the greatest achievement ever in physics.
It is currently the most promising way to reconcile quantum theory and
relativity. A more recent variant accounts for the graviton and contributes to
an explanation of the role of gravity, the pervasive but weak force that is
critical to the development and maintenance of our Universe. This is the
so-called M-theory (M stands for multidimensional "membranes" (commonly spoken
of as "branes" by superstring theorists). This theory postulates an 11th
dimension (the membrane); when added to the dimensional mix, the result permits
gravitons to fit in the general picture.
The original idea for superstrings
is traced to a model proposed in 1968 by the Italian physicist Gabriele
Veneziano (now at CERN) but at first ran into many difficulties, most being
overcome as theoreticians began to seriously consider it. An outstanding review
of what is up to today known or surmised about superstrings, in the context of
its importance to Cosmology, has been summarized in a book (which reached best
seller status) by Brian Greene, The Elegant Universe, 1999, W.W. Norton
& Co.). Greene has apparently replaced Carl Sagan as the "guru" of Science
whose personality favors an ability to popularize such hard concepts to master.
Public Broadcasting (PBS) through its Nova program has aired a 3 hour special
called "The Elegant Universe" (beautifully done!). I am attaching this PBS
website address (assuming they retain it online for future times) that
summarizes the fundamentals of superstring theory a la Greene.
There is also a web page covering the basic concepts that purports to be the
official site for a survey of Superstring Theory.
Note to reader: These next
paragraphs were added to this first page on November 1, 2002: Before
proceeding to the second page (covering Galaxies), it seems advantageous to give
you a broader framework at the outset that describes a General Model for
the SpaceTime expansion of the Universe that has continued after the first eras
of the Big Bang. This and related subjects are considered in more detail on page
20-8, 20-9, and 20-10. Because of the length of this synopsis, you are given the
option of skipping it by going directly to page 20-2 (click on Next below) or if
you wish to build up this background now, you can access it at page 20-1a. If you choose the
latter, check especially the paragraph in red at the bottom of page 20-1a.
*A measure of cosmic distance to any object
beyond our Sun is the light year [l.y.], defined as the distance
[~ 9.46 x 1012 or 9,460,000,000,000 km or ~5.9 trillion miles]
traveled by a photon moving at the speed of light [2.998.. x 108
m/sec, usually rounded off and expressed as 300,000 km/sec] during a journey of
1 Earth year; another distance parameter is the parsec, which is the
distance traversed in 3.3 l.y.) The parts of the Universe now visible are
thought to be a region within a (possibly much) larger Universe of matter and
energy, with light from these portions beyond the detectable limits having not
yet arrived at Earth.
** It is often difficult to find a clear
definition of the term "space" in most textbooks (just look for the word in
their index - it is almost always absent). We tend to think first of the "out
there" that has been reached and explored by unmanned probes and by astronauts
as the "space" of interest. One definition recently encountered describes space
as 'the dimensionality that is characterized by containing the universal gravity
field'. The writer (NMS) has tried to think up a more general definition. It
goes like this: Space is the totality of that entity that contains all real
particles of matter/energy, both dispersed and concentrated (in star and galaxy
clots), which fill and are confined to spatial dimensions that appear to be
changing (enlarging) with time. Anything one can conceive that lies outside
this has no meaning in terms of a geometric framework but can be conceptualized
by the word "void" which in the quantum world is hypothesized as occupied
by virtual particles capable of creating new matter and space if a fluctuation
succeeds in making a (or perhaps many) new Universe(s).
*** Symmetry in everyday experience relates
to geometric or spatial distribution of points of reference on a body that
repeat systematically when the body is subjected to specific regular movements.
When rotated, translated, or reversed as a reflection, the points after a
certain amount of movement are repeated in their same relative positions (e.g.,
a cube rotated 360° around an axis passing through the centers of two opposing
faces will repeat the square initially facing the observer four times [90°
increments} as it returns to its initial position). The concept of symmetry as
applied to subatomic physics has other, although related, meanings that depend
on conservation laws as well as relevance to spatial patterns. In general terms,
this mode of symmetry refers to any quantity that remains unchanged (invariant)
during a transformation. Implied are the possibilities of particle
equivalency and interchangeability (the term "shuffled" may be used to
refer such shifts). Expressed mathematically, certain fundamental equations are
symmetrical if they remain unchanged after their components (terms) are shuffled
or rotated. In quantum mechanics, gauge (Yang-Mills) symmetry involves
invariance when the three non-gravitational forces (as a system) undergo
allowable shifts in the values of the force charges. At the subatomic level in
the first moments of the Big Bang, symmetry is applied to a state in which the
fundamental forces and their corresponding particles are combined,
interchangeable, and equivalent; during this brief time, particles can "convert"
into one another, e.g., hadrons in leptons or vice versa. When this symmetry is
"broken", after the GUT state, the forces and their corresponding particles
become separate and distinct.
The progressive breaking of
symmetry during the first minute of the Big Bang has been likened (analogous) to
crystallization of a magma (igneous rock) by the process of differentiation. At
some temperature (range), a crystal of a mineral with a certain composition
precipitates out; if it can leave the fluid magma (crystal settling), the
remaining magma has changed in composition. At a lower temperature, a second
mineral species crystallizes, further altering the magma composition. When the
last mineral species crystallizes, at still lower temperatures, the magma is now
solidified. All the minerals that crystallized remain, each with its own
composition. In the Big Bang, as temperatures fall, different fundamental
particles become released, altering the energy state of the initial mix, as
specific temperatures are reached (and at different times) until the final
result is the appearance of all these particles, which as the Universe further
expands and cools become bound in specific arrangements (e.g., neutrons and
protons forming H and He nuclei; later picking up electrons to convert to atoms)
that ultimately reorganize in stars, galaxies, and the inter- and intra-galactic
medium of near empty space.
**** Energy can be said to be quantized,
that is, is associated with quanta (singular, quantum) which are discrete
particles having different units of energy (E) whose values are given by the
Planck equation E = hc/λ where h = Planck's constant, c = speed of light
(~300,000 km/sec), and λ = the wavelength of the radiation wave for the
particular energy state of the quantum being considered; the energy values vary
with λ as positioned on the electromagnetic spectrum (a plot of continuously
varying wavelengths). ***** This extremely rapid enlargement
reflects the earlier influence of inflation with its initially higher expansion
rates. Keep in mind that many of the parametric values cited in cosmological
research are current estimates or approximations that may change as new data are
acquired and/or depend on the particular cosmological model being used (e.g.,
standard versus inflationary Big Bang models). Among these, the most
sought-after parameter is H, the Hubble Constant (discussed later in this
review), being one of the prime goals for observations from the Hubble Space
Telescope.Big Bang Eras after the First Minute
Primary Author: Nicholas M.
Short, Sr. email: mailto:%20nmshort@ptd.net