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A Century of Cosmology

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Title: A Century of Cosmology


1
(From) massive neutrinos and inos and the upper
cutoff to the fractal structure of the Universe
(to recent progress in theoretical cosmology)
M. Lattanzi, R. Ruffini, G.V. Vereshchagin
  • A Century of Cosmology
  • August 27-31, 2007, Venice

2
Introduction
Cosmology is paradoxically simple, complex and
subtle
  • Simplicity
  • Einstein
  • Friedmann
  • Gamov vs. Zeldovich

Complexity observations
Help to understand this complexity comes from
3
New mathematics
a) Statistical mechanics, correlations and
discreteness in the fractal
Correlation length Giavalisco-Ruffini, 1987,
adopted by Pietronero Upper cut-off in the
fractal structure Rcutoff¼100 Mpc Possible
connection to the ino mass Mcell(Mpl/Mino)3Mino
Ruffini, Song, Taraglio, AA,1988
  • Calzetti, Giavalisco, Ruffini AA, 1988, 1989,
    1991 Ruffini, Song, Taraglio AA,1988, 1990
    Lattanzi, Ruffini, Vereshchagin AIP, 2003, PRD
    2005, AIP 2006.

b) Macroscopic gravity Ruffini, Vereshchagin,
Zalaletdinov, et al. 2007
4
New physics neutrinos
Absolute mass measure (KATRIN)
Arbolino, Ruffini, AA,1988
Galactic halos with m?9 eV, a specific
counterexample to Gunn and Tremaine limit
Tremaine, Gunn PRL,1979
Oscillations CERN-Gran Sasso Experiment
5
New astrophysics
6
E1054 ergs
7
The Standard Cosmology
  • Invariance of the laws of physics with space and
    time
  • Spatial energy density homogeneity (Friedmann)
  • The horizon paradox equal CMB temperature in
    causally unrelated regions (R.B. Partridge, 1975)
  • Attempts of solution Misner Mixmaster,
    inflation, etc.

last scattering surface
ee- annihilation in the lepton era
8
Pair plasma
  • Where do ee pairs exist?
  • Energy range 0.1 lt E lt 100 MeV
  • (below we dont have pairs, above there are muons
    and other particles)
  • We have this in cosmology as well as in GRB
    sources
  • (in both cases we can assume the plasma to be
    homogeneous and isotropic)
  • Pair plasma is optically thick, and intense
    interactions between photons and ee pairs take
    place
  • How the plasma evolves?

9
Timescales
  • There are three timescales in the problem
  • tpp - pair production timescale tpp
    tc(?Tnc)-1
  • tbr cooling timescale tbr ? -1 tc
  • thyd expansion timescale thyd c/R0.

10
Interactions
11
Relativistic Boltzmann equations
12
Numerical method Aksenov, Milgrom, Usov (2004)
  • Finite grid in the phase space to get ODE instead
    of PDE
  • basic variables are energies, velocities and
    angles
  • Gear method to integrate ODEs
  • several essentially different timescales stiff
    system
  • Control conservations of energy and particle
    number
  • spreading in the phase space to account for
    finiteness of the grid
  • Isotropic DFs
  • the code allows solution of a 1D problem
    (spherically symmetric)
  • Non-degenerate plasma
  • degenerate case is technically possible, but
    numerically is much more complex

13
Our initial conditions
  • We are interested in time evolution of the
    plasma, with initially
  • a) electrons and positrons with tiny fraction of
    photons
  • b) photons with tiny fraction of electrons and
    positrons
  • the smallest energy density, 1024 erg/cm3
  • flat initial spectra

14
First exampleelectrons and positrons with tiny
fraction of photons
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20
Starting with pairs (first example)
Starting with photons (second example)
Concentrations
Temperatures
Chemical potentials
21
Compton scattering
  • Start with the distribution functions
  • where ?kT/(mec2) is the temperature, j m
    /(mec2) is the chemical
  • potential, denotes positrons and electrons, ?
    stands for photons.
  • Suppose that detailed balance is established with
    respect to the
  • Compton scattering
  • This means reaction rate for this process
    vanishes
  • This leads to

22
Pair production and annihilation
  • Suppose now that detailed balance with respect to
    the pair production
  • and annihilation via the process
  • is established as well. From the condition that
    the corresponding
  • reaction rate vanishes
  • we find that the chemical potentials of
    electrons, positrons and photons
  • must be the same
  • However, there is no restriction that the latter
    is zero!
  • In fact, j 0 only in thermal equilibrium, so
    what we found is called
  • kinetic equilibrium.

23
Kinetic equilibrium
  • Homogeneous isotropic, spatially homogeneous
    plasma is
  • characterized by two quantities total energy
    density ? ?i and total
  • number density ? ni (initial conditions).
    Therefore, two unknowns ?k and
  • jk can be found easily, and energy densities and
    concentrations for
  • each component can be determined.
  • Compton scattering, pair production and
    annihilation as well as
  • Coulomb scatterings
  • cannot change the total number of particles.
  • To depart from kinetic equilibrium three-particle
    reactions are needed!

24
Thermal equilibrium
  • When we consider in addition to above
    two-particle reactions also
  • relativistic bremsstrahlung, double Compton
    scattering, three-photon
  • annihilation
  • and require that the reaction rates vanish for
    any of them, we arrive to
  • true thermal equilibrium condition

25
Conclusions
  • Thermal equilibrium is obtained for
    electron-positron-photon plasma by using kinetic
    equations and accounting for binary and triple
    interactions
  • The timescale of thermalization is always shorter
    than the dynamical one both in cosmology and in
    GRBs there is enough time to get thermal
    spectrum of photons even just with
    electron-positron pairs
  • If inverse triple interactions are neglected then
    thermal equilibrium never reached and pairs
    disappear on timescales lt10-12 sec. (as in
    Cavallo, Rees 1978 scenario)

Aksenov, Ruffini, Vereshchagin, Thermalization
of a non-equilibrium electron-positron-photon
plasma, Phys. Rev. Lett. (2007), in press
arXiv0707.3250
26
The horizon paradox in standard cosmology
  • Invariance of the laws of physics with space and
    time
  • Spatial energy density homogeneity (Friedmann)
  • equal CMB temperature in causally unrelated
    regions follows necessarily from the previous two
    assumptions, in view of the above treatment
  • It follows from these considerations, in
    particular, that also the initially cold Universe
    of Zeldovich would not be viable and would also
    lead to a hot Big Bang (as predicted by Gamow)
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