by Anthony Barreiro » Sun Apr 27, 2014 2:32 pm
Ann wrote:Anthony Barreiro wrote:
If there were cosmologists more than five billion years ago, they would have observed that the expansion of the universe was decelerating, and would have reasonably predicted an eventual "big crunch."
Sorry about standing in for Nitpicker here, but since I am so relieved that we are apparently
not headed for a Big Crunch, I have to defend the open universe. (I was about to write "the open university"!)
If the universe was already decelerating, then we would undoubtedly be headed for a Big Crunch. But the universe has never been decelerating. It was the
acceleration of the universe that was slowing down for a while, not the universe itself. When the two teams headed by Saul Perlmutter and Brian Schmidt and Adam Riess were chasing distant supernovas, their aim was to find out
how much the acceleration of the universe was decelerating. By finding out how much the acceleration of the universe was being slowed down by the effects of gravity, the teams wanted to find out if the universe was closed or not. They took it for granted that the acceleration of the universe was slowing down, but they didn't take it for granted that the universe was closed. It depended on how much the universe was slowing down. Of course, what they found was that the acceleration of the universe was speeding up.
Now imagine that there were astronomers and cosmologists more than five billion years ago. If they measured the acceleration of the universe at that time, they would indeed find that the acceleration was slowing down. But they would also find that the slowing down of the acceleration was not enough to ever "turn the universe around" and eventually make it collapse. They, too, would have concluded that they lived in an open universe.
Ann
Ann, my very superficial understanding, from Pasachoff and Filippenko's
The Cosmos: Astronomy in the New Millennium, is that the universe has always been expanding, but the rate of acceleration has changed. To quote page 502: "the data show that for roughly the first 9 billion years of its existence, the Universe was decelerating. Then, 4 or 5 billion years ago, the expansion rate began to accelerate." Again, I think about driving my car on the freeway. If I press my foot down on the gas pedal I go faster. If I take my foot off the gas pedal I go slower. But in either case I'm still moving forward.
By the way, I am firmly agnostic about the geometry and fate of the universe.
[quote="Ann"][quote]Anthony Barreiro wrote:
If there were cosmologists more than five billion years ago, they would have observed that the expansion of the universe was decelerating, and would have reasonably predicted an eventual "big crunch."[/quote]
Sorry about standing in for Nitpicker here, but since I am so relieved that we are apparently [i]not[/i] headed for a Big Crunch, I have to defend the open universe. (I was about to write "the open university"!)
If the universe was already decelerating, then we would undoubtedly be headed for a Big Crunch. But the universe has never been decelerating. It was the [i]acceleration[/i] of the universe that was slowing down for a while, not the universe itself. When the two teams headed by Saul Perlmutter and Brian Schmidt and Adam Riess were chasing distant supernovas, their aim was to find out [i]how much the acceleration of the universe was decelerating[/i]. By finding out how much the acceleration of the universe was being slowed down by the effects of gravity, the teams wanted to find out if the universe was closed or not. They took it for granted that the acceleration of the universe was slowing down, but they didn't take it for granted that the universe was closed. It depended on how much the universe was slowing down. Of course, what they found was that the acceleration of the universe was speeding up.
Now imagine that there were astronomers and cosmologists more than five billion years ago. If they measured the acceleration of the universe at that time, they would indeed find that the acceleration was slowing down. But they would also find that the slowing down of the acceleration was not enough to ever "turn the universe around" and eventually make it collapse. They, too, would have concluded that they lived in an open universe.
Ann[/quote]
Ann, my very superficial understanding, from Pasachoff and Filippenko's [i]The Cosmos: Astronomy in the New Millennium[/i], is that the universe has always been expanding, but the rate of acceleration has changed. To quote page 502: "the data show that for roughly the first 9 billion years of its existence, the Universe was decelerating. Then, 4 or 5 billion years ago, the expansion rate began to accelerate." Again, I think about driving my car on the freeway. If I press my foot down on the gas pedal I go faster. If I take my foot off the gas pedal I go slower. But in either case I'm still moving forward.
By the way, I am firmly agnostic about the geometry and fate of the universe.