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Tuesday, December 23, 2008 - 10:46 PM
For a group of scientists who profess to love the symmetries in
nature, cosmologists and astronomers spend an awful lot of time looking
for and analyzing imbalances in the cosmic architecture. http://sheehan.myblogsite.com
A new study, reported in the Dec. 16 Physical Review Letters, seeks
to explain why half of the sky appears to have larger deviations from
the average temperature of the radiation in the cosmic microwave
background, the remnant heat left over from the Big Bang, than the
other half does. The lopsided distribution in temperature may
provide new insights about the earliest moments in the universe, when
the cosmos underwent a brief but enormous growth spurt, expanding from
subatomic scales to something the size of a soccer ball in just a tiny
fraction of a second. It also suggests that the distribution of
galaxies in the sky today — how closely they cluster — may exhibit
subtle variations linked to differences in those early moments. Researchers
have known since 1992 that the microwave background is riddled with
tiny temperature variations. These relatively hot and cold spots mark
fluctuations in the density of the infant universe that ultimately gave
rise to the population of galaxies seen today. But it’s only
recently, using data from NASA’s Wilkinson Microwave Anisotropy Probe,
or WMAP, that astronomers have found hints that the contrast between
hotter and colder temperatures in the microwave background is more
pronounced on one side of the sky than on the other. http://www.theenvironmentsite.org/forum/members/louis-j-sheehan-esquire.html - vmessage171
Marc
Kamionkowski, Adrienne Erickcek and Sean Carroll, all of the California
Institute of Technology in Pasadena, take this temperature asymmetry as
a given, although its statistical significance remains under debate. The
early era of hyperexpansion, known as inflation, can explain many
features of the modern-day universe, including the general uniformity
over regions of the sky that are today separated by vast distances. In
the simplest model of the inflation of the universe, a field called the
inflation plays two roles. It provides the energy that drives the
expansion and also generates the seeds of galaxy formation: quantum
density fluctuations that enlarge to become the hot and cold spots in
the microwave background. This simple model, however, doesn’t reproduce
the apparent asymmetry actually observed with WMAP, Kamionkowski says. To
account for the asymmetry, Kamionkowski and his colleagues propose that
the inflaton has a more limited role. It would only provide the energy
that drives cosmic inflation. A separate field, called the curvaton and
proposed by other theorists about six years ago, would act as a silent
spectator during expansion. But just afterward, quantum fluctuations in
the curvaton field would convert to the fluctuations in density from
which researchers believe galaxies arose. http://blogs.ebay.com/mytymouse1/home/_W0QQentrysyncidZ756138010
“This idea gives you a
bit more freedom in constructing models, as you have separated out the
requirements to get sufficient inflation from the requirements to get
appropriate density fluctuations,” says Carroll. “That was crucial to
our model,” he adds. With just a single field, the inflaton,
having to do two jobs — providing the energy to both drive inflation
and to generate initial density fluctuations — it’s impossible to get
both the asymmetry between the different halves of the sky and the
actual magnitude of the tiny temperature differences observed in the
microwave background, Carroll says. Any asymmetry that would be
attained with just the inflaton field would come with larger deviations
within the microwave background from the average temperature than is
actually measured. http://blogs.ebay.com/mytymouse1/home/_W0QQentrysyncidZ755826010
If the curvaton exists, it would produce a
different pattern of primordial density fluctuations than the simplest
model of inflation would. http://louis-j-sheehan-esquire.sampa.com/louis-j-sheehan-esquire/blog
Those fluctuations, imprinted on in the
cosmic microwave background, are too small to be found by the Wilkinson
Microwave Anisotropy Probe but they would be readily detected by the
European Space Agency’s Planck mission, now scheduled for launch in
April 2009, Kamionkowski says. In addition, those differences in the
primordial fluctuations may produce a larger clustering of galaxies on
one side of the universe than the other, for which future telescope
surveys could search.
http://louisjsheehanesquire.blogsavy.com Princeton cosmologist David Spergel says he
finds the Caltech study intriguing but cautions that published studies
only reveal the asymmetry over large scales, comparing patches of sky
larger than the area of the full moon. “It’s important to show that the
[apparent] asymmetry is independent of scale,” he says, “…so the
statistical significance of the asymmetry is controversial.”
Louis J. Sheehan, Esquire
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