2.I.10D

Cosmology
Part II, 2006

The total energy of a gas can be expressed in terms of a momentum integral

E=0E(p)nˉ(p)dpE=\int_{0}^{\infty} \mathcal{E}(p) \bar{n}(p) d p

where pp is the particle momentum, E(p)=cp2+m2c2\mathcal{E}(p)=c \sqrt{p^{2}+m^{2} c^{2}} is the particle energy and nˉ(p)dp\bar{n}(p) d p is the average number of particles in the momentum range pp+dpp \rightarrow p+d p. Consider particles in a cubic box of side LL with pL1p \propto L^{-1}. Explain why the momentum varies as

dpdV=p3V\frac{d p}{d V}=-\frac{p}{3 V}

Consider the overall change in energy dEd E due to the volume change dVd V. Given that the volume varies slowly, use the thermodynamic result dE=PdVd E=-P d V (at fixed particle number NN and entropy SS ) to find the pressure

P=13V0pE(p)nˉ(p)dp.P=\frac{1}{3 V} \int_{0}^{\infty} p \mathcal{E}^{\prime}(p) \bar{n}(p) d p .

Use this expression to derive the equation of state for an ultrarelativistic gas.

During the radiation-dominated era, photons remain in equilibrium with energy density ϵγT4\epsilon_{\gamma} \propto T^{4} and number density nγT3n_{\gamma} \propto T^{3}. Briefly explain why the photon temperature falls inversely with the scale factor, Ta1T \propto a^{-1}. Discuss the implications for photon number and entropy conservation.