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Reporting errors
Inconsistent use of small k
In F.E., as given in the article now (2019 Aug 29), the k is the inverse of the comoving radius of curvature squared (positive or negative), i.e. +-1/R^2 and has dimensions of L^-2. However, in paragraph below k is used as a SIGN of k. It should either be a new variable (usually designated kappa), or it should say k>0, k<0. ... — Preceding
unsigned comment added by
2600:1702:1BD0:8CD0:855:E16C:9983:EF9F (
talk)
07:41, 29 August 2019 (UTC)reply
Context
The author of this article says that the Friedmann equations relate certain cosmological parameters in the context of general relavity. I would like to modify this statement to say that these equations define certain cosmological models in
general relativity, usually called the Friedmann dusts (or matter dominated Friedmann models) and Friedmann radiation fluids (or radiation dominated Friedmann models). The equations themselves arise in the course of deriving these models in a
comoving coordinate chart.
Isn't "relating practical real parameters within a theoretical context" the same as a "model"? All anyone needs to do is be careful when referring to the "FLRW metric", as derived from GR assuming the Cosmological Principle, or when referring to the "FLRW model", when certain additional assumptions are made in order to arrive at practical solutions within the metric.
It would be nice to include the actual value of the cosmic density of matter here. I've been searching the web for days trying to find a value, it seems to be one of the values that everybody else knows but never bothers to write down. AJH —Preceding
unsigned comment added by
210.98.27.91 (
talk)
10:21, 11 April 2008 (UTC)reply
is Pressure over velocity squared, or Force over area over velocity squared so
Differentiating ρ, P, and p in physics can be difficult (did you catch the pun?). I thought it was standard to put pressure P capitalized and p little as momentum, and rho as density. What are the conventions on Wikipedia?Alejandr01320:49, 14 August 2006 (UTC)reply
I think you left out a factor at the beginning -- I've taken the liberty of correcting it. Yes, it all comes down to the naming conventions for GR. Is the mass density or the energy density? In non-GR physics is normally mass density, but since c=1 is normally set by
Geometrized unit system it doesn't matter most of the time. Of course a general audience will not necessarily know of these unit conventions -- and according to WP policy articles should written with the general public in mind as well as the experts.
The which appears in the equations is mass-density, as noted above, but later in the article there is talk of energy density and vacuum energy. This is confusing, at least it was to me; the first time I read it I assumed was indeed energy density, but then noticed the dimensions of the equation wouldn't balance. I think it should be clarified by specifically saying 'mass density' when ρ is introduced. Or, perhaps by changing to being energy density which seems to be used on other pages (e.g.cosmological constant). Then the term becomes
A bit late in way of reply, but to clarify, is the energy density; is the energy density divided by ; it is not the `mass density'. In `usual' units of , is referred to as the energy density. See Coles and Lucchin, The Origin and Evolution of Cosmic Structure, for example.
129.78.56.231 (
talk)
07:10, 29 October 2018 (UTC)reply
mistake
I think, there is a mistake in the equations from the beginning. Instead of a2 in the last term on the r.h.s. there should be R2, where R = R(t) = a(t).R0. The dimension of the first equation is then s-2- same for all terms on the left and right hand side of the equation...
then the right-most term already has units of reciprocal seconds squared. The
Gaussian curvature when a=1, K has units of reciprocal meters squared. c has units of meters per second. a has units of one (i.e. arbitrary units or unit-less). So it is: m-2·m2s-21 = s-2. Is that OK?
JRSpriggs10:26, 29 May 2007 (UTC)reply
As a matter of fact, if the curvature is constant within a polygon, the area of the polygon times that curvature is just the "spherical" excess (in radians) of the sum of the interior angles of the polygon relative to the value in Euclidean space.
JRSpriggs04:38, 30 May 2007 (UTC)reply
In the article and everywhere else, k ist dimensionless -1, 0 or 1. Using here K=1/R²=(H/c)² instead of k makes sense. Who dares to correct it? There are so many places with k in the article.
Ra-raisch (
talk)
18:15, 18 June 2019 (UTC)reply
Uh, no, w is not proportional to T. For simple models ("dust", "radiation", etc) w is constant and luckily these models are quite good approximations to the real universe for quite long periods of its history. Only when w is independent of T (or equivalently of a) do we get nice closed-form solutions. Of course the real universe is a mixture of dust, radiation, dark energy etc but usually one dominates. Only when there is a cross-over between cases does the effective value of w change significantly, which happens relatively quickly (especially on a log-log plot!).
PaddyLeahy (
talk)
12:12, 25 April 2008 (UTC)reply
That is equivalent, so we might want to mention it in the article. However, the original second equation has historical significance; and it is named the "Friedman's acceleration equation". So I think we must retain it. Remember that the equations given emerge more or less directly from
Einstein field equations.
JRSpriggs (
talk)
11:46, 26 April 2008 (UTC)reply
Mistake
There appears to be a minor error near the beginning of the article where it states that k is the normalized curvature parameter at a=1. It is not defined at a=1 at all; k is the ratio of the modulus squared of a, divided by a squared. That is how it appears in my lecture notes from Imperial College. If my notes are wrong then someone should correct me before next Wednesday when I have a 'Particle Cosmology' exam there! In the meantime, I'll simply remove the "at a=1" bit of the sentence.
Dazza79 (
talk)
21:06, 23 May 2008 (UTC)reply
I reverted your edit because the text was correct as it stood. Obviously, I cannot read your notes, so I cannot comment on them. But you should bear in mind that different authors use different notations, different definitions for a, k, etc.. It is imperative that the notation in the article be consistent with itself, not that it be consistent with your notes.
JRSpriggs (
talk)
00:04, 24 May 2008 (UTC)reply
To MichaelCPrice: One can only choose k to be one of those three specific values by sacrificing the connection of a to the present which also means that R0 would not be the present day radius of curvature. This is not helpful, in my opinion. Adjusting the variables so that the present has a special status is appropriate because, for us who live in the present, it is special.
JRSpriggs (
talk)
21:30, 24 May 2008 (UTC)reply
I don't see how renormalising 'k' removes the connection of 'a' to the present? What exactly do you mean by this phrase? The FRW metric for example contains both a 'k' and an 'a(t)'. So surely I am free to choose any value of a, at any time t, including the present, irrespective of my choice of +/-1 or 0 for k. If I choose a=1 to be the present, and k happens to be -1 say, then at a=2 k will still be -1. So how does my renormalised choice of -1 for the value of k affect the value of a? It should be totally independent. Or put another way, If I live in an open universe today I will still be living in an open universe tomorrow. 'a' can be as small or large as you like and the rescaled value of k remains the same. Yet the way I'm reading the article I get the impression that, with the wording as it stands, 'k' has the value it has now only at the present time. So if it is -1 today, it might be 0 at some point in the future?
Dazza79 (
talk)
22:54, 25 May 2008 (UTC)reply
To Dazza79: Let the cosmological constant and the equation of state for the contents of the universe both be fixed; and assume that the universe is homogeneous and isotropic, i.e. it has a
Friedmann-Lemaître-Robertson-Walker metric. Then the possible instantaneous states (time slices) of the universe form a two-parameter class. The first parameter amounts to choosing a time for the time-slice. You may use any of (among others) for it. The second parameter describes the spacetime continuum as a whole. When the spatial curvature is positive, the second parameter amounts to choosing the minimal spatial curvature, i.e. the spatial curvature when . Since the second parameter varies continuously, it cannot be represented correctly by k if k is restricted to have values in the discrete set {-1, 0, +1}.
You asked what can stop you from choosing a and k to be anything you want? Well, what if I want k to be a real number other than -1, 0, or +1; perhaps +4.37?
JRSpriggs (
talk)
05:14, 27 May 2008 (UTC)reply
OK. Then I think the word 'normalised' in the article is out of place. If 'k' can vary continuously, then it is not the normalised spatial curvature is it? Seeing the word normalised made me assume that we were taking the often used convention of putting k = +/-1 or 0. Let's simply call it the spatial curvature. I will edit the article accordingly. If you disagree, then my next question is how would you distinguish between the normalised spatial curvature as described above, and the k=+/-1, 0 spatial curvature, which I would certainly describe as normalised?
Dazza79 (
talk)
07:03, 27 May 2008 (UTC)reply
Looks good to me: now reads "k is the spatial curvature when a = 1 (i.e. today)". As currently written, k is clearly a dimensional quantity (inverse length squared), so it is only "normalised" in the sense that it applies now, which is already stated. Therefore 'normalised' was at least redundant if not wrong, and certainly misleading.
PaddyLeahy (
talk)
17:28, 27 May 2008 (UTC)reply
Surely we can remove all references to R and R0 by simply stating that a is the hyper-radius of the model universe? To explain the origin of the k term in the equation we need simply note that for a static hypersphere the Riemann curvature term is , where k = +/-1 or 0 etc. This makes it very easy to see why k = 0 in the flat example, since a -> infinity when flat, and k = -1 is simply a -> ia for the hyperbolic case. --
Michael C. Pricetalk07:49, 28 May 2008 (UTC)reply
Why would we want to remove such references? IMHO the article would be incomplete without making clear what these terms mean, since very frequently (as in Dazza79's lecture notes) the Friedman equation is written in terms of R rather than a.
PaddyLeahy (
talk)
14:17, 28 May 2008 (UTC)reply
I personally find it clearer to just talk in terms of a and not R, but each according to their taste. There's no reason why we can't have both explanations. BTW I think the current explanation of k is totally confusing (and non-standard -- see note below about MWT and HE). The current explanation states that k is the spatial curvature today, leaving unanswered what it was yesterday and will be tomorrow. (You may think that the next two sentences clears everything up, but I disagree.) Anyway, I leave that clarification to others.
The standard references, Misner, Wheeler & Thorne's Gravitation and Hawking & Ellis' Large Scale Structure of Space-Time, have k = +1, 0 or -1; HE even called its value "normalized".--
Michael C. Pricetalk07:14, 29 May 2008 (UTC)reply
How nice of JRSpriggs to revert my changes, without explanation here. Charming as ever. I trust an explanation of quite how my changes were "mistaken" will be appearing at some point.--
Michael C. Pricetalk19:16, 31 May 2008 (UTC)reply
My GR notes by Ray d'Inverno include the comment in the Robertson-Walker metric section 6, subsection 2, "k=+1 ..... The space is closed .... This is why in this case R(t) is often referred to as the 'radius of the universe'." before going on to give the Friedman equations in terms of same k & R. --
Michael C. Pricetalk07:59, 1 June 2008 (UTC)reply
MichaelCPrice's mistakes
" is one-sixth of the spatial component of the
scalar curvature"
The scalar curvature, R, is a scalar and as such it has only one component which cannot reasonably be called "spatial".
" and have two possible equivalent definitions"
Even if the definitions which follow this are inter-convertible, they are not equivalent because they yield different values for k and a.
It is not reasonable to call a the radius of curvature of the universe when k=0 because in that case the radius of curvature is either infinite or, more correctly, undefined.
Well of course they yield different values for k and a, as explained in the text, but is invariant and is what appears in the equation. Your point is what precisely?
For an isotropic homogeneous universe, modeled as a
3-sphere with radius a, we have :. k = 1 for sphere, -1 for a hyperboloid. The spatial component refers to the last term. Perhaps you can suggest a better description?
It is well understood, even by beginners, that Euclidean geometry corresponds to a surface of a sphere of infinite radius.
Throughout the article, his name is spelled two different ways. I think it would be better if we settled on a single spelling; ideally, the same way he did. Apparently, he spelled it with a single 'n', "Friedman". I've hunted around on the web, a bit, and found what I think could be a good reference. It appears to be an image of the title page of one of his papers:
http://www.springerlink.com/content/l23864w241673530/fulltext.pdf?page=1Michael McGinnis (
talk)
19:25, 15 March 2009 (UTC)reply
Of his two famous papers, the earlier one (which you linked) spells it Friedman, and the later one (
[1]) spells it Friedmann. The "Friedmann" spelling is overwhelmingly more common in modern physics papers, and it's also the spelling used in every online encyclopedia I checked except Wikipedia, so I think we should stick with "Friedmann", and I think the article on the man himself should be moved as well. --
BenRG (
talk)
13:13, 16 March 2009 (UTC)reply
Thank you, BenRG and JRSpriggs, for clearing this up for me. I do feel that a consistent spelling is needed, if only to reduce the possibility of confusion for people who might think that "Friedman" and "Friedmann" are two different people. I'm going to change all references to "Friedmann".
Michael McGinnis (
talk)
19:58, 19 March 2009 (UTC)reply
Mistake on Copernican Principle
Hi all!
I suspect the statement "There are serious consequences if homogeneity and isotropy (the Copernican Principle) are not quite true, [...]" is incorrect. The Copernican Principle states that the Earth does not occupy any particular position in the Universe. What the author refers to is the Cosmological Principle, which states that the Universe is isotropic about all locations and homogeneous.
For a reference, please see Peacock's "Cosmological Physics" on page 66:
"[...] most scientists believe that
it is not reasonable to adopt a cosmological model in which the universe is simply a
joke played for the benefit of mankind. This attitude is encapsulated in the Copernican
principle, which states that humans are not privileged observers."
This definition is much more compatible with what Copernicus did actually discover, namely that the Sun and not the Earth was at the center of the Solar System.
There is a certain confusion about this topic in the scientific community. Me too I was confused about the various definitions, until I read pages 65-66 of Peacock's book. They are an eye-opener.
I implemented the above proposed change. I also added the following clarifying line:
"Notice, however, that the mainstream of Cosmological research endorses a homogeneous and isotropic Universe on scales larger than ~100 Mpc." I think it is correct to inform the reader of this.
To
Kentgen1 (
talk·contribs): See
Help:Section. Heading for sections, subsections, subsubsections, etc. should be created using equals signs on either side of the title. For example, "==Your title here==" generates a section title "Your title here" when left-justified on a line. Thus your use of bold-face text to create a title (e.g. "Caveats to the Use of the Friedmann Equations to Model the Universe") is inappropriate. Also, it is preferred to use tripled single quotation marks to delimit bold-face rather than <b> and </b>.
We do not assume that the matter in the universe is an ideal gas. I do not know how you reached the conclusion that we so assume.
If the Earth were at the center of a large spherical void within a denser surrounding, that would not cause the matter near the edge of the void to accelerate away from us. Thus this is not an alternative explanation for the acceleration due to the
cosmological constant.
The deviation of gravitational potential field from its background value is proportional to 1/r. The resulting gravitational force field (gradient of the potential) is proportional to 1/r2. This holds for ordinary celestial bodies as well as super-massive black-holes (outside the near field effect); there is no distinction between types of bodies in this respect. I do not see how you get that this would cause a violation of the
cosmological principle which has to do with average behavior. That is, the homogeneity and isotropy are understood to be approximations which hold best at large scales.
Third opinion: Edits like
this are unacceptable because of their disruptive nature. There is simply no reason to put Wikipedia links inline like that. But even beyond that, there's a lack of
reliable sourcing overall. Consider the text:
Wiki articles are not considered reliable, so how is the conclusion that the equations rely on that "simplification" drawn? If we could find some actual sources to back that up then at least the issue could be discussed, but until then it seems to be Kentgen's
original research on the topic. —
HelloAnnyong(say whaaat?!)19:14, 1 July 2010 (UTC)reply
Since issues have repeatedly arisen concerning the origin of the equations and the correct values of the constants in them, I think it would be helpful to derive them here. For simplicity, I will focus on the special case when k2≈0 and Λ=0. Any components of tensors or pseudo-tensors omitted below are zero. Assume that
The assumption of
Friedmann–Lemaître–Robertson–Walker metric is that our three dimensional space is a hyper-sphere in a four dimensional space (with time added later). w is the extra dimension in that four dimensional space and it is characterized by Which coordinate system we use for the three-space does not affect the result, so I just chose what I thought would be the most convenient one. The coordinates I chose are the Cartesian coordinates t,x,y,z associated with the reduced-circumference polar coordinates.
JRSpriggs (
talk)
14:31, 22 March 2013 (UTC)reply
Greek indices vary over 0,1,2,3. Roman indices vary over 1,2,3. x1,x2,x3 refer to x,y,z respectively.
If you doubt any step or do not understand it, please indicate the first such questionable step and I will attempt to explain it or fix it.
JRSpriggs (
talk)
08:04, 26 March 2013 (UTC)reply
Deriving the continuity equation (conservation of energy)
The time derivative of (00 component)
is
Substituting in
gives
Throwing out the common factor gives
that is,
which is the continuity equation. This says that the reduction in the mass in a volume is equal to the amount that moves out its sides due to the expansion of the universe plus the mass equivalent of the energy expended by pressure pushing that mass out.
JRSpriggs (
talk)
08:44, 28 March 2013 (UTC)reply
As a check, I will derive the continuity equation by another method. In general, it takes the form
as indicated at
stress–energy tensor. In our case, the stress-energy of a fluid at rest is
Thus the time component is
which agrees with the continuity equation found above.
Let us also examine the i component which is
The Friedmann equations and the conserved energy equation are differential equations, can we solve them for a(t) function? How does the Friedmann equations describe the evolution of Universe in time? It describes the expansion of universe, right? but How about initial conditions (t=0)? Could you tell more about
Cosmological principle, and why from it we can derive
FLRW metric? Thank you for your attention.
Earthandmoon (
talk)
12:47, 28 March 2013 (UTC)reply
Given an additional formula for the pressure, a numerical solution of the Friedmann equations is possible. You may specify freely k and the values of a and ρ at an initial time. Then a can be updated with the first Friedmann equation; and ρ with the continuity equation. Pressure p must be provided by the added equation.
The exact solutions above assume that the universe is expanding. So that one takes the positive square-root. If the universe were contracting, then just change the sign of the square-root.
For an expanding universe, w > −1 implies that the universe begins with a
big bang at
If w < −1, then the universe ends with a
big rip at
The physical meaning of the coordinates is implied by the metric equation. In some articles, such as
Schwarzschild metric, explanations are provided, but they are actually redundant because they follow from the metric equation. The proper time, τ, is the time measured by a clock moving along the same world line with the test particle. In FLRW, t is time measured by clocks which have been free-falling since the Big Bang and thus are at rest relative to the average motion of local matter (using the assumption of homogeneity and isotropy). This assumes they were synchronized at the Big Bang and thus remain synchronized locally.
JRSpriggs (
talk)
05:16, 2 April 2013 (UTC)reply
To date, the critical density is estimated to be approximately five atoms (of monatomic hydrogen) per cubic metre,
whereas the average density of ordinary matter in the Universe is believed to be 0.2–0.25 atoms per cubic metre
(3.71295775e-28 kilograms) / 1.67377e-27 = 0.221832017 Atomic Mass Units
Riess and Perlmutter (notes 2) using Type 1a supernovae calculated
the end of the universe tend ∼ 1.7e-121 ∼ 0.588e+121 units of Planck time;
tend ∼ 0.588e+121 ∼ 0.2e+71yrs (19)
The maximum temperature Tmax would be when tage = 1.
What is of equal importance is the minimum possible temperature
Tmin - that temperature 1 unit above absolute zero, for in
the context of this expansion theory, this temperature would
signify the limit of expansion (the black-hole could expand
no further). For example, if we simply set the minimum temperature
as the inverse of the maximum temperature;
Tmin ∼ 1/Tmax ∼ 8π/TP ∼ 0.1773e−30 K (20)
This would then give us a value ‘the end’ in units of Planck
time (∼ 0.35e+73 yrs) which is close to Riess and Perlmutter;
t-end = T^4 max ∼ 1.014e+123 (21)
The mid way point (Tmid = 1K) becomes T^2 max ∼ 3.18e+61 ∼ 108.77 billion years.
Particles which have a
proper motion in an expanding universe should decelerate relative to their immediate surroundings. To examine this effect, I use the formula for acceleration at
User:JRSpriggs/Force in general relativity#Acceleration applied to a free-falling particle
I can't find any other source for Omega-k "spatial curvature density". It seems intuitive that the definition should be Omega-k = Omega - 1. Which is correct? Further, how is Omega-k related to k?
Asgrrr (
talk)
12:27, 5 June 2016 (UTC)reply
The Universe permanently maintains an allowed critical value
[2] range of energy with five constituents, a. expansion, b. mean time flow, c.dark matter, d. dark energy, e. leptohadronic matter. All these constituents change proportionally but are extant inside an allowed
critical value range. Big Bang launches when there isn't any other method to maintain that equilibrium. We know that the Big Bang event occurred in the past, at approximately 13.8 billion years ago, because it deleted most data of our
predecessor universe (all data except very few under the noise level of the low energy range that cause some low energy anisotropy, but under the noise level, although even under the noise level officially aren't detectable we can still see some non random neither homogenous patterns at that range). The maximum
anisotropy of the full spectrum occurred before the Big Bang, but due to
inflation shifted all paleosympantic (concerning our predecessor universe) energy spectrum to the subnoise (under the threshold level of noise) of the ultra low energy part of our spectrum. A simplistic popular belief is that each universe exists among two
critical value enents, the paleosympantic (concerning our predecessor universe) Big Bang that produced our universe, and the universal death meta-Big Bang that will generate our offspring universe. Others focus only on the critical value part of the overall range of possible analogies among the universal constituents. Ω isn't functional at any level. The critical density occurs from a critical value allowed range. Thus the Ω parameter is permanently close to 1, but due to quantum noise never one. At extreme analogies among the energetic contributing universal constituents Ω cannot be close to 1 except if the universe explodes; and exactly that is what it does in order to maintain the Ω critical density inside the allowed critical value. The homogeneity of the thorough universal energy range isn't something other than the Big Bang goal. The Ω critical value range of the critical density itself forces homogeneity by expanding more or less universal regions during the Big Bang to achieve it, but the homogenous full spectrum of energy result, buries the anisotropic noise of the previous universe underneath the ultra low energy part of the spectrum at subthreshold levels, officially non detectable - but due to quantum mechanical probabilistic diffusion of information, will be discovered in the future (with some uncertainty because it is a subthreshold semi-anisotropy, it isn't a complete quantum decohesion or a pure anisotropy, because the Big Bang prevented that from happening, and that makes our job more difficult, but not impossible).
I understand what you mean but your English isn't correct. If the absolute value of the fullrange spectrum of energy is lower than the critical value, the universe is no longer possible to maintain Ω and and thus Big Bang occurs. -- 2.84.220.243(
talk·contribs·WHOIS)05:59, 26 July 2016 (UTC)reply
Imaginary radius of curvature
I am not sure what the meaning of the following sentence is:
If k = −1, then (loosely speaking) one can say that i· a is the radius of curvature of the universe.
See
Gaussian curvature. If the two principal curvatures have the same sign so that the Gaussian curvature is positive, then the radius of curvature, a, is the reciprocal of their
geometric mean. What is meant here is that if the two principal curvatures have opposite signs (e.g. the Gaussian curvature is negative), then the reciprocal of the geometric mean of their absolute values is a.
JRSpriggs (
talk)
14:06, 25 September 2016 (UTC)reply
Confusing Text
The text following the last equation in the Density parameter section is confusing and misleading to a reader with little background knowledge.
The problem is that the sign of Ω_0,k is backwards. That is the sign is positive for a universe with negative (hyperbolic) curvature, and negative for a universe with positive (hyperspherical) curvature. In particular, the variable k was previously introduced with a description that k=+1 corresponds to positive curvature, and k=-1 corresponds to negative curvature.
I hope someone with the appropriate skills will edit this text to remove this confusion.
BHBloom (
talk)
18:01, 28 April 2017 (UTC)reply
To date, the critical density is estimated to be approximately five atoms (of monatomic hydrogen) per cubic metre, whereas the average density of ordinary matter in the Universe is believed to be 0.2–0.25 atoms per cubic metre
I am confused about something regarding the Density parameter.
Lets say hypothetically it is the case that the value of ρ is actually greater than ρc and that the universe is therefore finite. If the Universe is expanding, this surely means that ρ will be decreasing? What happens when ρ becomes equal to ρc? Does the universe suddenly switch from being finite to being infinite? How can this make sense?
First, you are assuming that the critical density, ρc, does not change as time passes. Since it depends on the Hubble constant H (which is not actually constant), it does change.
Second, in the scenario you envision, the expansion would stop and become a contraction before the density became equal to the critical density. So the value of the density would begin to rise again preventing the equality from occurring.
JRSpriggs (
talk)
19:12, 11 October 2017 (UTC)reply
If k is meant to be K=1/R²=(c/H°)², then this turns to Ωc = -1/a² = -1. But what the heck is Ωc supposed to be? It is not the critical density, I guess it is supposed to be the curvature densitiy which is everywhere else called Ωk. On the other hand the value of Ωc ≈ -1 points to the critical value, but the minus sign is wrong then. So i guess it is a mixture and should be Ωc = 1+Ωk
Ra-raisch (
talk)
19:14, 18 June 2019 (UTC)reply
As far as I understood now, there are two conventions: k using as curvature index (-1,0,1) or (usually K) as the curvature (1/m²) and also a using as the scaling factor or the scaling parameter (m) which should be A in order to distinguish them. Thus here it should be Ωk and not Ωc, leaving k and a as is, the ambiguity of which should be cleared and naming altered throughout the article.
Ra-raisch (
talk)
22:44, 23 June 2019 (UTC)reply
Friedmanns original equation could not possibly have included the term "a(t)"!
... because a(t) wasn't invented until four years (1929) after his death (1925)!
Do you have any reliable source to falsify that statement? Did really Friedmann invent and use "a(t)" as it is interpreted today?
Hilmer B (
talk)
19:46, 20 August 2020 (UTC)reply
To a mathematician using the radius of a hyper-sphere as a function of time when the hyper-sphere varies in size is obvious. If you need to see that Friedmann was aware of it, see his letter to Ehrenfest
here where he says "a world, the space of which possesses a curvature radius varying with time;".
JRSpriggs (
talk)
20:44, 23 August 2020 (UTC)reply
I guess you're referring to II:1 in that letter:
“From my second note in Russian that I have sent to you, you have seen that under
certain assumptions common to those of Einstein and De Sitter it is possible to
obtain the universe with the space of a (spatially!) constant curvature, the radius
of curvature of which is varying with time.”
Friedmann does here not suggest that he shared the belief that the scale of space itself varies with time, or ?! It may rather suggest that he, himself, considered spatial variations in the curvature. No trace of an expanding “a(t)” universe i this statement.
The quality and the beauty of Friedmann's equation is rather the way he relates the curvature of spacetime to (the local) density. He may very well have allowed the curvature to vary in space. What Einstein-deSitter suggested was a variation also in the time dimension. My guess is that they were worried because their interpretation of ∇2Φ = 4πGρ did only allow positive curvature in a static universe . (∇2Φ > 0 ...)
So back again to the original question: I guess that we can both agree upon that 1/R2 should have appeared in Friedmann's original, and I guess only, version of this equation. But was it also 1/a2(t)R2? And in that case how was that a(t) defined? Exactly: what did Friedmann's original equation look like?
Hilmer B (
talk)
19:07, 24 August 2020 (UTC)reply
Unfortunately, the original papers of Friedmann are behind a wall: you have to pay to see them and then they are in Russian or German. This is a common problem, forcing us to rely on secondary sources. But the mere fact that those papers are not available to us is not evidence that Friedmann was unaware of what is now purported to be their contents.
JRSpriggs (
talk)
19:30, 24 August 2020 (UTC)reply
Weird - Friedman died 95 years ago. Not even Disney has managed to get such a prolonged protection ...
So - the conclusion is that none of us knows. A case similar to the situation of Schrödinger's poor cat ...
Well, thanks for your contribution.
Hilmer B (
talk)
20:39, 25 August 2020 (UTC)reply
Justification for eliminating the Cosmological Constant from the First Equation
You properly derive the first equation as:
But then you go on to state that:
These equations are sometimes simplified by replacing
to give:
What is the justification for this substitution? I might guess that you assume that the Cosmological Constant is so small with respect to the other terms that it is effectively zero, but you can't just drop a major variable without an explanation.
It is a question of how the cosmological term is interpreted. Is it a complication in the law of gravity (as originally conceived)? Or is it a mysterious "
dark energy" which should be included in the stress-energy tensor on the other side of the equation? Lately, people have been leaning to the latter interpretation.
JRSpriggs (
talk)
03:31, 21 February 2021 (UTC)reply