The cosmological arrow Position1 #104014 The cosmological arrow of time refers to the direction of time in which the universe is expanding. Generally considered to be closely related to the thermodynamic arrow. |
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- CitationsAdd new citationList by: CiterankMapLink[1] The Arrow of Time in Cosmology (article)
Author: Castagnino, Mario and Lombardi, Olimpia and Lara, Luis Cited by: Peter Baldwin 3:17 AM 13 April 2011 GMT Citerank: (3) 103806The physics of timeIs our subjective sense that time has a direction from past to future reflected in impersonal physical processes and laws? Is it better - from the impersonal viewpoint - to look asymmetries in time rather than a direction (to the future) of time?8FFB597, 108412Entropy of universe problematicalThere are a number of difficulties providing a viable definition of the entropy of the universe as a whole, as distinct from an isolated sub-system.13EF597B, 108413Priority of spacetime geometryThe authors of the paper cited below claim that it is possible to define a cosmological arrow of time in a way that does not need to be reduced to non-temporal considerations - that is an intrinsic feature of spacetime, and which therefore has conceptual priority over the entropic approach.1198CE71 URL:
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Excerpt / Summary Abstract
Scientific cosmology is an empirical discipline whose objects of study are the large-scale properties of the universe. In this context, it is usual to call the direction of the expansion of the universe the "cosmological arrow of time". However, there is no reason for privileging the radius of the universe for defining the arrow of time over other geometrical properties of the space-time. Traditional discussions about the arrow of time in general involve the concept of entropy. In the cosmological context, the direction past-to-future is usually related to the direction of the gradient of the entropy function of the universe. But entropy is a thermodynamic magnitude that is typically associated with subsystems of the universe: the entropy of the universe as a whole is a very controversial matter. Moreover, thermodynamics is a phenomenological theory. Geometrical properties of space-time provide a more fundamental and less controversial way of defining an arrow of time for the universe as a whole. We will call the arrow defined only on the basis of the geometrical properties of space-time, independently of any entropic considerations, the "cosmological arrow of time". In this paper we will argue that: (i) it is possible to define a cosmological arrow of time for the universe as a whole, if certain conditions are satisfied, and (ii) the standard models of contemporary cosmology satisfy these conditions. |