Complete Cosmology
A standard introductory path through expansion, Friedmann dynamics, distance scales, and the thermal history of the universe.
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Complete Cosmology
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Observational Starting Point
Modern cosmology begins from two empirical facts. First, on sufficiently large scales the universe is statistically homogeneous and isotropic. Second, distant galaxies are redshifted in a way that is naturally described by expansion.
The homogeneous and isotropic spacetime ansatz is the FLRW metric. In units where the spatial curvature parameter is ,
The single function is the scale factor. Much of introductory cosmology is the study of how evolves and how light propagates through this geometry.
Redshift and the Scale Factor
For light emitted when the scale factor was and observed when it is , the cosmological redshift is
This relation is kinematic: it follows from the stretching of wavelengths by the expanding geometry. It is the bridge between observation and cosmic time.
Hubble Expansion
The expansion rate is defined by the Hubble parameter
For nearby galaxies, the leading relation between recession velocity and proper distance is Hubble’s law,
The law is local and approximate. At large redshift, distances must be defined more carefully because light travels through an evolving spacetime.
Friedmann Dynamics
Assuming general relativity and a perfect-fluid stress-energy tensor, the first Friedmann equation is
The second Friedmann equation can be written as
The first equation is an energy constraint; the second describes acceleration. Together with energy conservation, they determine the scale-factor history for specified matter, radiation, curvature, and cosmological constant.
Critical Density
For a spatially flat universe with , the critical density is
Density parameters are defined by . They allow the Friedmann equation to be written as a bookkeeping equation for the cosmic contents.
Thermal History
In the early universe, radiation dominated. As the universe expanded, it cooled. The cosmic microwave background is the relic radiation from the epoch when photons decoupled from matter. Its near-blackbody spectrum and anisotropies are central evidence for hot Big Bang cosmology.
Standard Model of Cosmology
The minimal successful model is often called Lambda CDM. It contains radiation, baryonic matter, cold dark matter, and a cosmological constant. Its success is not that it explains everything from first principles, but that it gives a compact quantitative framework for the expansion history and large-scale structure.
Complete Special Relativity
A structured path through Lorentz symmetry, intervals, and proper time.
Cosmic Microwave Background
Relic blackbody radiation from the epoch when photons decoupled from matter.
Cosmological Constant
The constant energy density term associated with accelerated expansion.
Critical Density
The density that makes the spatial curvature term vanish for a given Hubble rate.
Friedmann Equations
The equations governing the expansion of a homogeneous and isotropic universe.
Hubble Law
The low-redshift relation between recession speed and distance.
Scale Factor and Redshift
Cosmological redshift is the stretching of photon wavelengths by the expansion of space.