Dwarf galaxies & Cosmology Let’s start from the beginning … Jorge Peñarrubia & Matt Walker.

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Dwarf galaxies & Cosmology Let’s start from the beginning Jorge Peñarrubia & Matt Walker
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Transcript of Dwarf galaxies & Cosmology Let’s start from the beginning … Jorge Peñarrubia & Matt Walker.

Page 1: Dwarf galaxies & Cosmology Let’s start from the beginning … Jorge Peñarrubia & Matt Walker.

Dwarf galaxies & Cosmology

Let’s start from the beginning …

Jorge Peñarrubia & Matt Walker

Page 2: Dwarf galaxies & Cosmology Let’s start from the beginning … Jorge Peñarrubia & Matt Walker.

The Universe is expanding!

Hubble 1929

Page 3: Dwarf galaxies & Cosmology Let’s start from the beginning … Jorge Peñarrubia & Matt Walker.

Cosmology: The Equations

space-time vs mass/energy

mass/energy = density/pressure

IF the Universe is isotropic and homogeneous Friedman-Lemaitre-Robertson-Walker (FLRW)metric

Combining the above formulae …

Friedman eqs : scale factor vs time

a(t)

equation of continuity

Hubble parameter

Page 4: Dwarf galaxies & Cosmology Let’s start from the beginning … Jorge Peñarrubia & Matt Walker.

Cosmology: The Equations

Equation of state of the Universew=0 Matterw=1/3 Relativistic particles

Matter

Relativistic particles

Accelerating Universe

Page 5: Dwarf galaxies & Cosmology Let’s start from the beginning … Jorge Peñarrubia & Matt Walker.

Cosmology: The Issues

1. The Homogeneity Problem “The Universe becomes less homogeneous with time due to gravity. How can we explain a Universe so smooth in the past?”

2. The curvature Problem

3. The Horizon Problem

observations: Ω0 ≈1

theory:

“The curvature of the Universe was very small at t≈0 “

Co-moving Horizon (aH)-1 tends to zero as t≈0

“How can the CMB be so homogeneous if different regions were not casually-connected at t≈0 ?”

Page 6: Dwarf galaxies & Cosmology Let’s start from the beginning … Jorge Peñarrubia & Matt Walker.

Solution: Inflation

1. Curvature

2. Horizon

aH=exp[Ht] H H as t 0Curvature k is not arbitrarily low ab initio

{1 –exp[-H (ti -t) ]} H-1

Horizon is not arbitrarily small at t≈0