Big Bang Theory - astronomy.
Publié le 11/05/2013
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hydrogen atoms.
Hydrogen atoms can only absorb and emit specific colors, or wavelengths, of light.
The formation of atoms allowed many other wavelengths of light,wavelengths that had been interfering with the free electrons prior to the cooling of the universe, to travel much farther than before.
This change set free radiation thatwe can detect today.
After billions of years of cooling, this cosmic background radiation is at about 3 K (-270°C/-454°F).The cosmic background radiation was first detected and identified in 1965 by American astrophysicists Arno Penzias and Robert Wilson.
The Cosmic Background Explorer (COBE) spacecraft, a project of the National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA), mapped the cosmic background radiationbetween 1989 and 1993.
It verified that the distribution of intensity of the background radiation precisely matched that of matter that emits radiation because of itstemperature, as predicted for the big bang theory.
It also showed that cosmic background radiation is not uniform, that it varies slightly.
These variations are thoughtto be the seeds from which galaxies and other structures in the universe grew.
Evidence indicates that the matter that scientists detect in the universe is only a small fraction of all the matter that exists.
For example, observations of the speeds atwhich individual galaxies move within clusters of galaxies show that a great deal of unseen matter must exist to exert sufficient gravitational force to keep the clustersfrom flying apart.
Cosmologists now think that much of the universe is dark matter—matter that has gravity but does not give off radiation that we can see or otherwisedetect.
One kind of dark matter theorized by scientists is cold dark matter, with slowly moving (cold) massive particles.
No such particles have yet been detected, though astronomers have made up fanciful names for them, such as Weakly Interacting Massive Particles (WIMPs).
Other cold dark matter could be nonradiating starsor planets, which are known as MACHOs (Massive Compact Halo Objects).
An alternative theory that explains the dark-matter model involves hot dark matter, where hot implies that the particles are moving very fast.
Neutrinos, fundamental particles that travel at nearly the speed of light, are the prime example of hot dark matter.
However, scientists think that the mass of a neutrino is so low that neutrinoscan only account for a small portion of dark matter.
If the inflationary version of big bang theory is correct, then the amount of dark matter and of whatever else mightexist is just enough to bring the universe to the boundary between open and closed.
Scientists develop theoretical models to show how the universe’s structures, such as clusters of galaxies, have formed.
Their models invoke hot dark matter, cold darkmatter, or a mixture of the two.
This unseen matter would have provided the gravitational force needed to bring large structures such as clusters of galaxies together.The theories that include dark matter match the observations, although there is no consensus on the type or types of dark matter that must be included.Supercomputers are important for making such models.
V REFINING THE THEORY
Astronomers continue to make new observations that are also interpreted within the framework of the big bang theory.
No major problems with the big bang theoryhave been found, but scientists constantly adjust the theory to match the observed universe.
In particular, a “standard model” of the big bang has been established byresults from NASA's Wilkinson Microwave Anisotropy Probe (WMAP), launched in 2001 ( see Cosmology).
The probe studied the anisotropies, or ripples, in the temperature of cosmic background radiation at a higher resolution than COBE was capable of.
These ripples indicate that regions of the young universe were veryslightly hotter or cooler, by a factor of about 1/1000, than adjacent regions.
WMAP’s observations suggest that the rate of expansion of the universe, called Hubble’sconstant, is about 71 km/s/Mpc (kilometers per second per million parsecs, where a parsec is about 3.26 light-years).
In other words, the distance between any twoobjects in space that are separated by a million parsecs increases by about 71 km every second in addition to any other motion they may have relative to one another.In combination with previously existing observations, this rate of expansion tells cosmologists that the universe is “flat,” though flatness here does not refer to theactual shape of the universe but rather that the geometric laws that apply to the universe match those of a flat plane.
To be flat, the universe must contain a certain amount of matter and energy, known as the critical density.
The distribution of sizes of ripples detected by WMAP showthat ordinary matter—like that making up objects and living things on Earth—accounts for only 4.4 percent of the critical density.
Dark matter makes up an additional23 percent.
Astoundingly, the remaining 73 percent of the universe is composed of something else—a substance so mysterious that nobody knows much about it.
Called“dark energy,” this substance provides the antigravity-like negative pressure that causes the universe's expansion to accelerate rather than slow down.
This“accelerating universe” was detected independently by two competing groups of astronomers in the last years of the 20th century.
The ideas of an accelerating universeand the existence of dark energy have caused astronomers to substantially modify previous ideas of the big bang universe.
WMAP's results also show that cosmic background radiation was set free about 389,000 years after the big bang, later than was previously thought, and that the firststars formed about 200 million years after the big bang, earlier than anticipated.
Further refinements to the big bang theory are expected from WMAP, which continuesto collect data.
An even more precise mission to study the beginnings of the universe, the European Space Agency’s Planck spacecraft, is scheduled to be launched in2007.
Contributed By:Jay M.
PasachoffMicrosoft ® Encarta ® 2009. © 1993-2008 Microsoft Corporation.
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