Astronomy 162 - Stars, Galaxies, & the Universe

Lecture 33: Einstein's Universe


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What are the implications of Relativity for the Universe? This lecture
introduces the Cosmological Principle, which states that the Universe is
Homogeneous and Isotropic on Large Scales. Applying this to his
then-new General Relativyt, Einstein got a surprise: the Universe must
either expand or contract in response to all the matter/energy that
fills it, something not observed in 1917. To attempt to stabilize the
Universe, he introduced a Cosmological Constant (Lambda), that was to
prove his greatest blunder. Subsequent theoretical and observational
work was to establish that the Universe is indeed expanding
systematically, if you look on scales large enough (the scale of
galaxies). We will review observational evidence for the large-scale
Homogeneity and Isotropy of the Universe, Einstein's brilliant conjecture,
and see how the Cosmological Constant maybe wasn't such a blunder after
all, as it has recently made a comeback of sorts. We'll explore these
themes in greater detail in subsequent lectures.
Recorded 2006 February 22 in 1008 Evans Laboratory on the Columbus campus
of The Ohio State University.
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Astronomy 162 - Stars, Galaxies, & the UniverseBy Richard Pogge

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