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📖 Core Concepts Universe – All of space‑time plus its contents (matter, energy, radiation, empty space). Spacetime – A 4‑D continuum (3 spatial + 1 temporal) where events are points. Big Bang Model – Hot, dense origin → rapid expansion & cooling; still expanding today. Inflation – Exponential expansion in the first $10^{-32}$ s that flattened space. Recombination –  377 kyr after the Bang, electrons bound to nuclei; photons decoupled → the Cosmic Microwave Background (CMB). FLRW Metric – Assumes homogeneity & isotropy; described by a scale factor $R(t)$ (or $a(t)$) and curvature index $k\in\{1,0,-1\}$. Friedmann Equation $$\left(\frac{\dot a}{a}\right)^2 = \frac{8\pi G}{3}\rho - \frac{k}{a^{2}} + \frac{\Lambda}{3}$$ Governs how $a(t)$ evolves with energy density $\rho$, curvature $k$, and cosmological constant $\Lambda$. Density Parameter $\Omega$ – Ratio of actual density to critical density; determines geometry: $\Omega =1$ → flat ($k=0$) $\Omega <1$ → open ($k=-1$) $\Omega >1$ → closed ($k=+1$) Composition – Dark energy ≈ 69 %, dark matter ≈ 26 %, ordinary (baryonic) matter ≈ 5 % of total mass‑energy. ΛCDM Model – Λ (cosmological constant) + Cold Dark Matter; explains CMB anisotropies, large‑scale structure, and supernova data. Cosmic Acceleration – Discovered via distant Type Ia supernovae; implies a negative deceleration parameter ($q\approx-0.55$). --- 📌 Must Remember Age of Universe: $13.799 \pm 0.021$ Gyr (ΛCDM). Observable radius: ≈ 46 billion ly (diameter ≈ 93 billion ly). Ωm ≈ 0.3, ΩΛ ≈ 0.7, Ωk ≈ 0 (flat within uncertainties). $w = p/\rho \approx -1$ for dark energy (consistent with a true Λ). Helium‑4 mass fraction from BBN ≈ 25 % (hydrogen ≈ 75 %). Matter–radiation equality redshift $z{\rm eq}\approx 3400$. Deceleration parameter $q \approx -0.55$ (accelerating expansion). Inflation duration: $<10^{-32}$ s; expands space by > $10^{26}$ factor. Dark matter makes up ≈ 84.5 % of all matter; dark energy ≈ 70 % of total energy density. --- 🔄 Key Processes Early‑Universe Timeline Planck epoch → Inflation (≤ $10^{-32}$ s) → rapid exponential growth. Reheating → particles, radiation dominate. Nucleosynthesis (≈ 3 min) → H & He formed. Matter–radiation equality (≈ 47 kyr) → matter dominates. Recombination (≈ 377 kyr) → CMB released. Structure formation → density fluctuations → dark‑matter halos → stars/galaxies. Deriving Geometry from CMB Measure angular size of the first acoustic peak → infer curvature $k$. Flatness → peak at 1°; shift indicates open/closed. Using Type Ia Supernovae Observe peak luminosity → compare to known absolute magnitude → compute distance modulus → plot distance vs redshift → detect acceleration. Solving Friedmann Equation Identify dominant term (radiation, matter, Λ) for a given epoch → integrate to obtain $a(t) \propto t^{1/2}$ (radiation), $a(t)\propto t^{2/3}$ (matter), $a(t)\propto e^{Ht}$ (Λ‑dominated). --- 🔍 Key Comparisons Flat vs Open vs Closed Universe Flat: $k=0$, $\Omega=1$, infinite volume, Euclidean geometry. Open: $k=-1$, $\Omega<1$, saddle‑shaped, infinite volume. Closed: $k=+1$, $\Omega>1$, spherical, finite volume. Dark Energy vs Cosmological Constant Λ (constant): $w=-1$, unchanging density. Quintessence (dynamic): $w\neq -1$, may evolve with time. Dark Matter vs Baryonic Matter Dark: interacts only gravitationally, 26 % of energy density, forms halos. Baryonic: interacts electromagnetically, makes stars/gas, 5 % of energy density. Standard Candles: Type Ia SN vs Cepheids Cepheids: period‑luminosity relation, useful up to 30 Mpc. Type Ia SN: nearly uniform peak luminosity, reach $z>1$, probe cosmic acceleration. --- ⚠️ Common Misunderstandings Observable Universe ≠ Whole Universe – We only see out to 46 Gly; the total universe could be much larger or infinite. Expansion of Space ≠ Galaxies Moving Through Space – Space itself stretches; bound systems (e.g., solar system) do not expand. Flat Geometry Does Not Mean “No Curvature” – It means curvature is zero on large scales; locally spacetime can still be curved by mass. Dark Energy Is Not a “Force” – It is a uniform energy density with negative pressure, causing repulsive gravity. Ω = 1 Does Not Imply No Dark Energy – Ω includes all components; flatness can coexist with Λ≈0.7 and Ωm≈0.3. --- 🧠 Mental Models / Intuition Balloon Analogy – Dots on the balloon surface move apart as the balloon inflates → illustrates cosmic expansion and why there is no “center” in 3‑D space. Rubber Sheet – Massive objects dent a stretchy sheet → gravity as spacetime curvature, explaining orbital motion without a “force” pulling. Energy‑Density Balance – Think of the Friedmann equation as a budget: curvature, matter, radiation, and Λ each “spend” part of the total expansion rate. --- 🚩 Exceptions & Edge Cases $w<-1$ (Phantom Energy) – Leads to a Big Rip scenario where expansion becomes infinite in finite time. Non‑zero Curvature Within Errors – Current data allow $|Ωk| \lesssim 0.01$; future surveys may reveal a slight curvature. Early‑Universe Singularities – Classical GR predicts $R\to0$; quantum gravity may resolve the singularity (not covered in outline). --- 📍 When to Use Which Friedmann Equation without Λ – Use for epochs before dark energy dominates (radiation‑ or matter‑dominated eras). Full Friedmann with Λ – Apply for $z \lesssim 1$ where acceleration is measurable. CMB Acoustic Peaks – Best for determining curvature and $\Omegab h^2$. BAO Standard Ruler – Ideal for intermediate redshifts ($0.2 \lesssim z \lesssim 0.7$) to cross‑check distance scales. Type Ia SN – Primary tool for detecting late‑time acceleration ($z \gtrsim 0.5$). --- 👀 Patterns to Recognize Exponential Growth → Inflation – Look for statements about “rapid, exponential expansion” in the first $10^{-32}$ s. $a(t)\propto t^{n}$ – $n=1/2$ (radiation), $n=2/3$ (matter), $n\to\infty$ (Λ‑dominated). Acoustic Peak Locations – First peak near $\ell\approx220$ signals flat geometry. Matter‑Domination → Structure Formation – Density fluctuations growing ∝ $R$ after $z{\rm eq}$. Negative Deceleration Parameter – Indicates acceleration; $q<0$ appears in supernova results. --- 🗂️ Exam Traps Diameter vs Radius – Observable diameter ≈ 93 billion ly; many students mistakenly quote 46 billion ly. Sign of Deceleration Parameter – $q=-0.55$ means accelerating; a positive $q$ would mean slowing expansion. Ω Total vs Individual Components – $\Omega{\rm total}=1$ does not mean each component is 1; remember $\Omegam\approx0.3$, $\Omega\Lambda\approx0.7$. Curvature Index $k$ vs Curvature Parameter $\Omegak$ – $k$ is discrete (−1,0,1); $\Omegak$ is a continuous measure of deviation from flatness. Inflation vs Big Bang – Inflation is a sub‑phase of the Big Bang, not a separate model. Dark Energy vs Dark Matter – They have opposite effects on expansion; confusing them reverses the physical interpretation of many problems.
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