A1.16

Statistical Physics and Cosmology
Part II, 2003

(i) Explain briefly how the relative motion of galaxies in a homogeneous and isotropic universe is described in terms of the scale factor a(t)a(t) (where tt is time). In particular, show that the relative velocity v(t)\mathbf{v}(t) of two galaxies is given in terms of their relative displacement r(t)\mathbf{r}(t) by the formula v(t)=H(t)r(t)\mathbf{v}(t)=H(t) \mathbf{r}(t), where H(t)H(t) is a function that you should determine in terms of a(t)a(t). Given that a(0)=0a(0)=0, obtain a formula for the distance R(t)R(t) to the cosmological horizon at time tt. Given further that a(t)=(t/t0)αa(t)=\left(t / t_{0}\right)^{\alpha}, for 0<α<10<\alpha<1 and constant t0t_{0}, compute R(t)R(t). Hence show that R(t)/a(t)0R(t) / a(t) \rightarrow 0 as t0t \rightarrow 0.

(ii) A homogeneous and isotropic model universe has energy density ρ(t)c2\rho(t) c^{2} and pressure P(t)P(t), where cc is the speed of light. The evolution of its scale factor a(t)a(t) is governed by the Friedmann equation

a˙2=8πG3ρa2kc2\dot{a}^{2}=\frac{8 \pi G}{3} \rho a^{2}-k c^{2}

where the overdot indicates differentiation with respect to tt. Use the "Fluid" equation

ρ˙=3(ρ+Pc2)(a˙a)\dot{\rho}=-3\left(\rho+\frac{P}{c^{2}}\right)\left(\frac{\dot{a}}{a}\right)

to obtain an equation for the acceleration a¨(t)\ddot{a}(t). Assuming ρ>0\rho>0 and P0P \geqslant 0, show that ρa3\rho a^{3} cannot increase with time as long as a˙>0\dot{a}>0, nor decrease if a˙<0\dot{a}<0. Hence determine the late time behaviour of a(t)a(t) for k<0k<0. For k>0k>0 show that an initially expanding universe must collapse to a "big crunch" at which a0a \rightarrow 0. How does a˙\dot{a} behave as a0a \rightarrow 0 ? Given that P=0P=0, determine the form of a(t)a(t) near the big crunch. Discuss the qualitative late time behaviour for k=0k=0.

Cosmological models are often assumed to have an equation of state of the form P=σρc2P=\sigma \rho c^{2} for constant σ\sigma. What physical principle requires σ1\sigma \leqslant 1 ? Matter with P=ρc2P=\rho c^{2} (σ=1)(\sigma=1) is called "stiff matter" by cosmologists. Given that k=0k=0, determine a(t)a(t) for a universe that contains only stiff matter. In our Universe, why would you expect stiff matter to be negligible now even if it were significant in the early Universe?