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Inflationary universe Position1 #107149 Some cosmologists claim that the inflationary cosmological theory explains the extremely smooth distribution of matter and energy - and hence low entropy - of the early universe. The extremely rapid expansion effectively smooths out any initial irregularities. | |
+Citations (2) - CitationsAdd new citationList by: CiterankMapLink[1] The Cosmic Origins of Time's Arrow
Author: Sean M. Carroll - Theoretical physicist, California Institute of Technology Cited by: Peter Baldwin 4:11 AM 12 May 2011 GMT Citerank: (4) 104153Why low entropy in the past?How do we account for the low entropy of the early universe reflected in the extreme - but not perfect - homogeneity of the distribution of matter and energy shortly after the Big Bang? When gravity is prominent - as in the early universe - a smooth distribution is unstable and of low entropy.8FFB597, 104159Fluctuations in de Sitter spaceCosmologist Sean Carroll has proposed that low entropy may result from fluctuations in De Sitter space - a vacuum except for dark energy and the end point of expanding space time. Some fluctuations lead to cosmological inflation, giving rise to smooth low entropy 'baby universes' - like ours.959C6EF, 106948No reason for entropy reversalThere is no good reason to suppose that the entropy gradient will reverse and entropy decrease during the collapsing phase of the cycle. It would be extremely improbable for this to happen for just the reasons Boltzmann outlined in his statistical explanation of the Second Law.13EF597B, 107150Presupposes lower entropyAs an explanation for the low initial entropy of the universe, inflationary cosmology does not work since for it to work the dark energy had to begin in an even lower entropy configuration. The puzzle is pushed back a step rather than resolved.13EF597B URL:
| Excerpt / Summary "Many cosmologists have tried to attribute the time asymmetry to the process of cosmological inflation. Inflation is an attractive explanation for many basic features of the universe. According to this idea, the very early universe (or at least some part of it) was filled not with particles but rather with a temporary form of dark energy, whose density was enormously higher than the dark energy we observe today. This energy caused the expansion of the universe to accelerate at a fantastic rate, after which it decayed into matter and radiation, leaving behind a tiny wisp of dark energy that is becoming relevant again today. The rest of the story of the big bang, from the smooth primordial gas to galaxies and beyond, simply follows.
The original motivation for inflation was to provide a robust explanation for the finely tuned conditions in the early universe - in particular, the remarkably uniform density of matter in widely separated regions. The acceleration driven by the temporary dark energy smooths out the universe almost perfectly. The prior distribution of matter and energy is irrelevant; once inflation starts, it removes any traces of the preexisting conditions, leaving us with a hot, dense, smooth early universe." |
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