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Cosmology · undergrad

Friedmann Equations

The equations governing the expansion of a homogeneous and isotropic universe.

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Friedmann Equations

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Setup

Assume the universe is homogeneous and isotropic on large scales. The geometry is described by the FLRW metric and matter is modeled as a perfect fluid with density ρ\rho and pressure pp.

First Friedmann Equation

The first Friedmann equation is

H2=8πG3ρkc2a2+Λc23.H^2 = \frac{8\pi G}{3}\rho -\frac{kc^2}{a^2} +\frac{\Lambda c^2}{3}.

It relates the expansion rate to energy density, spatial curvature, and the cosmological constant.

Acceleration Equation

The acceleration equation is

a¨a=4πG3(ρ+3pc2)+Λc23.\frac{\ddot a}{a} =-\frac{4\pi G}{3}\left(\rho+\frac{3p}{c^2}\right) +\frac{\Lambda c^2}{3}.

Positive pressure gravitates in general relativity. Radiation therefore affects expansion more strongly than nonrelativistic matter.

Conservation

The fluid equation is

ρ˙+3H(ρ+pc2)=0.\dot\rho + 3H\left(\rho+\frac{p}{c^2}\right)=0.

For an equation of state p=wρc2p=w\rho c^2, this gives ρa3(1+w)\rho\propto a^{-3(1+w)}.

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