APS April Meeting 2015
Volume 60, Number 4
Saturday–Tuesday, April 11–14, 2015;
Baltimore, Maryland
Session Q1: Kavli Foundation Plenary Session II: Our Changing View of the Universe
8:30 AM–10:18 AM,
Monday, April 13, 2015
Room: Holiday 4-6
Sponsoring
Unit:
APS
Chair: Ian Shipsey, Oxford University
Abstract ID: BAPS.2015.APR.Q1.1
Abstract: Q1.00001 : 50 Years of the CMB
8:30 AM–9:06 AM
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Abstract
Author:
John Mather
(NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center)
The cosmic microwave background radiation, measured with CN molecules but
unrecognized by 1941, predicted in 1948, detected in 1964, and published in
1965, is now the basis for precision cosmology, a phrase that would once
have been an oxymoron. With confirmation of its blackbody spectrum, and the
statistics of its hot and cold spots and polarization, the CMB tells us that
the expanding universe can be described very simply. With just 6 parameters,
we match the measured statistics and enjoy the ``standard model'' of
cosmology with percent-level accuracy, but we require two mysterious
substances that only astronomers have detected: dark matter and dark energy.
Gravity alone, acting on the primordial perturbations, explains the growth
of cosmic structures, though we argue about the detailed properties of the
dark matter. And the idea of cosmic inflation, propelled by a hypothetical
field, fits the measurements and explains why the universe is flat and
uniform, and filled with nearly scale-invariant primordial fluctuations.
The development of instruments and theory has been spectacular, and I will
summarize the breakthrough concepts. But after 50 years the job is not done:
new equipment could measure the spectrum, anisotropy, and polarization even
better. At long wavelengths, the spectrum could be different from a
blackbody, due to electrons or redshifted hydrogen 21 cm emission, and it
could be either hotter than the CMB (from energy release) or colder (from
adiabatic cooling). At intermediate wavelengths, the spectrum could show
traces of the hydrogen recombination lines, and we know that recombination
was delayed by trapping of Lyman $\alpha $ photons. Moreover, the statistics
of the polarization tell us about the nature of the forces during the first
moments of the universe, and whether there were propagating gravitational
waves in equipartition with other fluctuations. Discoveries await!
To cite this abstract, use the following reference: http://meetings.aps.org/link/BAPS.2015.APR.Q1.1