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Cosmology

Cosmology

Astrophysics and cosmology: the golden age

06 Dec 1999

Our understanding of the universe has advanced immeasurably in the last century, and there seems no end to the wealth of new discoveries as we approach the next millennium

spiral galaxy NGC1232

As we look back over 2000 years of astrophysics, we see two enormous peaks of scientific achievement. One is at the beginning of the epoch – the Greek world of Aristotle, Aristarchus and Ptolemy. The other peak is where we are standing now. The achievements in this century, and particularly during the last 50 years, have been immense.

Around 330 BC Aristotle recognized that the Sun and Moon are spheres, and that their orbits around the Earth are circular. He showed that the movements of the planets could be constructed from a combination of several circular motions. But after carefully considering the idea that the Sun was at the centre of the orbits, he opted for the Earth as the centre of the solar system.

Aristotle correctly explained eclipses of the Sun and Moon, and deduced that the Earth was spherical from its shadow on the Moon. He even made a fair estimate of the Earth’s radius. Moreover, he recognized that the stars must be very distant and argued that they too were spherical. He also postulated that they were distributed over a range of distances.

To appreciate Aristotle’s achievement, we have to understand that no significant advance on his picture of the world was made for almost 1900 years until Nicolas Copernicus discovered that the Sun is the centre of the solar system. Even that great advance was made within the Aristotelian framework and was conceived as part of an effort by Copernicus to improve the consistency of his observations with Aristotle’s prescription for planetary orbits.

During the Dark Ages most of this knowledge was lost to European view, although some was preserved by Arab astronomers (see Physics before Galileo by William Wallace, this issue). Only a feeble light was shed on this darkness by scholarly monks like the Venerable Bede in the 8th century. The Renaissance was not – as some would have – when astronomers broke Aristotle’s mould, starting with the work of Galileo at the beginning of the 17th century. The true Renaissance was the rediscovery of Aristotle’s works by European thinkers during the 12th and 13th centuries.

Out of the Dark Ages

One of the difficulties of reviewing 2000 years of astrophysics is that many of the advances made by astronomers tend also to be great advances in physics. Galileo’s analysis of the role of acceleration in understanding falling bodies and the motion of projectiles can be classified as pure physics. However, Newton’s recognition that the orbit of the Moon around the Earth is a limit of the motion of a projectile thrown from the Earth, and hence the discovery of universal gravity, must surely be an astrophysical discovery.

The work of Galileo and Newton in the 17th century represented the first major advance since the time of Ptolemy, 15 centuries earlier. Both scientists made key contributions to the development of the telescope. Newton provided the crucial breakthrough of the reflecting telescope, and Galileo was one of the first to apply the newly invented refracting telescope to astronomy. His description in Starry Messenger (Siderio Nuncio) of his first observations of the Moon, Jupiter and the Milky Way using the telescope is one of the most beautiful documents in science.

The telescope greatly improved the accuracy of positional astronomy and opened the way for many significant breakthroughs. In 1728 James Bradley discovered aberration, the cyclic change in the apparent position of a star due to the Earth’s orbital velocity round the Sun. And in 1838 Friedrich Bessel discovered parallax, the small change in the position of the nearer stars as seen from the opposite sides of the Earth’s orbit.

The telescope also led immediately to a huge expansion in the number of known so-called nebulae. William Herschel, whose professional astronomical career was made possible by his discovery of Uranus while working as a musician for King George III, devoted much of his time to surveying nebulae. He laid the foundations for modern nebular astrophysics, but could not decide whether nebulae were unresolved star systems or clouds of interstellar gas. In 1800 Herschel made a discovery that was to open the way to the multiwavelength astronomy of the 20th century. He found that the Sun emitted infrared radiation beyond the red end of the spectrum. A few years later Johann Ritter was inspired by this to look for light beyond the violet end of the spectrum, and discovered ultraviolet radiation.

The mid-19th century brought the second great technological tool of the astrophysicist, the spectrograph. It immediately became clear that some of the nebulae, like the famous one in Orion, were hot gaseous clouds. And the spectrum of the Sun’s atmosphere, which was recorded during an eclipse, revealed the presence of a new element, helium. A century later, helium was to prove of profound cosmological significance.

And so astronomers entered the 20th century with a horizon larger than that of Aristotle, but this was nothing compared with what was to come. They had the telescope and the spectrograph, Newtonian gravity and its application to the orbits of the Moon and planets. But they still had no real astrophysics, no relativity, no quantum theory and no real cosmology. In this brief article I can give only the most superficial account of this century’s achievements, omitting entirely, for example, solar-system science.

Stellar structure and evolution

In the early years of this century Ejnar Hertzsprung and Henry Russell independently suggested that the brightness and colour of nearby bright stars might show how they had evolved with time. The so-called Hertzsprung-Russell diagram shows the variation of the luminosity with colour (which is related to surface temperature) for the galaxy’s population of stars.

Figure 1

In the 1920s Arthur Eddington laid down the basic equations of stellar structure and energy transport, and derived relationships between the mass, radius and central temperature of stars. These relations demonstrated that the interior of stars were at temperatures above a million degrees kelvin. Meanwhile Niels Bohr’s new quantum theory was applied to the ions seen in the surface layers of stars, and was crucial to the development of models of stellar atmospheres. This work culminated in the realization that the atmospheres of stars are mainly composed of hydrogen and helium.

In 1932 it was proposed that the stars lying on the so-called “main sequence” – a prominent band across the Hertzsprung-Russell diagram – are composed mainly of hydrogen. The main sequence was therefore interpreted as a locus of different stellar masses, not an evolutionary track.

In the late 1930s Hans Bethe and collaborators discovered the “proton-proton” and “carbon-nitrogen cycle”, nuclear-fusion processes that power the Sun and other main-sequence stars. And in 1955 Fred Hoyle and Martin Schwarzschild calculated the first detailed model for the evolution of a star that has exhausted the hydrogen at its centre. At this point the star starts to burn helium, thus creating carbon, nitrogen and oxygen, and rapidly becomes a luminous, extended, cool “red giant” star. By 1962 Chishuro Hayashi and co-workers were able to fully explain the Hertzsprung-Russell diagram with detailed evolutionary models for the full range of stellar masses from 0.01 to 100 times the mass of the Sun. The full evolution of stars from their birth to their death was finally understood!

Distance scale and the expansion of the universe

The studies of so-called Cepheid variable stars by Henrietta Leavitt in 1912 were fundamental to the discovery of the expanding universe. Cepheid variables are a type of star that undergoes regular radial pulsations. Leavitt demonstrated that there is a relation between the absolute luminosity and the period of pulsation.

Edwin Hubble used this relation in 1924 to measure the distance to spiral nebulae and demonstrated that they were extragalactic. Meanwhile Vesto Slipher had been measuring the velocities of the galaxies using the Doppler shifting of their spectral lines and found that most of them were receding.

In 1929 Hubble combined his galaxy-distance measurements and those of other researchers (based on the brightest stars in galaxies) with the recession velocities to discover the expansion of the universe. The theorist Alexander Friedmann had already shown that expanding-universe models were just as plausible under general relativity as the static, homogeneous, isotropic model postulated by Einstein in 1917.

For almost 30 years, however, the timescale of the expansion of the universe seemed far too short compared with the age of the Earth and the oldest stars. Allan Sandage greatly eased this problem in 1956 thanks to his improved galaxy-distance estimates. Controversy about the rate of expansion of the universe – measured by the so-called Hubble constant, H0 – has continued to rage for the past 30 years. However, a consensus is now in sight for a value in the range 60-70 km s-1 per megaparsec (1 megaparsec = 3.26 million light-years). This translates to an expansion timescale of 15 ± 1.2 billion years, which would be the age of the universe if there were no acceleration or deceleration of the expansion.

Meanwhile the age of the oldest stars, estimated from stellar-evolution models, has steadily decreased. In 1982 it was estimated as 17 billion years. However, the most recent studies of ancient stars use distances derived from the Hipparcos astrometric mission, and show that the stars are 11.5 ± 1.5 billion years old. This means that there is no longer an “age problem” for the universe.

The new astronomy of the invisible wavelengths

The wartime development of radar released a whole generation of radio experts into astronomy to follow up the pioneering discoveries made in the 1930s and 1940s. In 1934 Karl Jansky had discovered radio emission from the Milky Way and in the 1940s Grote Reber completed the first all-sky radio maps. In the same period John Hey discovered radio emission from the Sun and detected the first radio point sources. By the late 1950s radio astronomy was beginning to be a major field of modern astronomy.

Other wavelength bands soon followed: infrared astronomy made rapid progress during the 1960s, culminating in the launch of the Infrared Astronomical Satellite (IRAS) in 1983 and the European Space Agency’s Infrared Space Observatory (ISO) in 1995. The launch of the Uhuru satellite in 1970 marked a great step forward for X-ray astronomy.

The new astronomies brought the discovery of a wealth of new phenomena, such as radio galaxies, quasars, pulsars and hence neutron stars. Others findings have included X-ray binaries with neutron stars and black holes, massive black holes in galactic nuclei, starburst and ultraluminous infrared galaxies, protoplanetary discs, and gravitational lensing by stars, galaxies and clusters.

Black holes proved to be one of the most dramatic consequences of Einstein’s general theory of relativity. Discussed first by a series of theorists, they are now seen as the common end point for stars that are at least 20 times more massive than the Sun. Black holes are pervasive in galactic nuclei, where they are found with masses ranging between 106 and 109 solar masses. Although the evidence for their existence is inevitably indirect, it is by now overwhelming.

High-energy astrophysics – the study of energetic photons and relativistic particles – has been a wonderfully rich field. Achievements have included the detailed physics of gaseous accretion onto discs around black holes and compact stars, and models for the generation of relativistic jets in active galactic nuclei.

The interstellar medium

The discovery of interstellar dust by Robert Trumpler in 1930 transformed our perception of the space between the stars. Subsequent studies of dust and of atomic, molecular and ionized gas have revealed the complex physics of the clouds of gas and dust that pervade galaxies, including our own. Spectroscopic studies, ranging from optical to radio wavelengths, have been particularly important in understanding the ways in which new stars are continually formed from the interstellar dust and gas.

Most of the heavy elements in the interstellar medium, which comprise about 2% of the total mass, are either in the form of small grains of silicate or carbonaceous dust, or in carbon-monoxide molecules. Arno Penzias and his collaborators first discovered carbon monoxide in interstellar space in 1970. Now over 50 species of interstellar molecule are known.

Interstellar dust has a drastic effect on the flow of radiation through a galaxy. A significant fraction of the visible and ultraviolet light emitted by stars is actually absorbed by dust and re-emitted at infrared wavelengths (figure 1). The maps of the sky made by IRAS revealed the full picture of this re-emitted radiation for the first time.

The hot big bang

The most significant breakthrough of the new astronomy was the discovery of the microwave background radiation by Penzias and Robert Wilson in 1965. This radiation was immediately interpreted as the relic of the radiation-dominated phase of a hot big-bang universe. Its high degree of isotropy pointed towards an exceptionally simple structure for the universe on the largest scales.

In the 1940s and 1950s George Gamow and co-workers had pushed the concept of a hot big-bang universe that was dominated by radiation in its early stages. They were hoping to explain that the elements originated from nuclear reactions in the early universe. In the end only helium, deuterium and lithium proved to be cosmological relics, according to detailed calculations by Bob Wagoner, Willy Fowler and Fred Hoyle in 1967.

Geoffrey and Margaret Burbidge, Fowler and Hoyle had previously shown that the heavy elements – those from carbon onwards – were made in the stars. And in 1972 it was demonstrated that the remaining light elements (beryllium and boron) were made by cosmic rays ploughing through interstellar helium nuclei.

Figure 2

In the 1970s groups at Princeton, Berkeley and Florence detected the first tiny deviation from isotropy in the microwave background radiation. This so-called “dipole anisotropy” is due to the motion of our galaxy through the cosmic frame. The effect is that the microwave sky appears slightly hotter in the direction of our motion, by one part in a thousand, and slightly cooler in the opposite direction.

All-sky galaxy maps derived from the IRAS surveys allowed myself and co-workers to demonstrate that this motion was due to the gravitational attraction of galaxies within 300 megaparsecs. The precision with which the isotropy of the microwave background could be measured continued to improve. Then in 1991 the Cosmic Background Explorer (COBE) team announced that it had detected anisotropies at the level of 1 part in a 100,000 on a 10° angular scale (figure 2). This was the first evidence of the small density fluctuations from which, ultimately, galaxies and clusters of galaxies must evolve.

From the 1960s the spectrum of the radiation had seemed reasonably close to a black body at 2.7 K. These measurements reached their climax in 1990 when the COBE team showed that it had measured the perfect Planckian spectrum, accurate to one part in a thousand. This Planckian form is the strongest possible evidence for a big-bang universe with a radiation-dominated early phase.

Formation of galaxies and clusters

Galaxies and clusters of galaxies are thought to originate from the effects of gravity on small density fluctuations present in the early universe. This idea was first developed by Jim Peebles and Yakov Zel’dovich in the late 1960s. But by 1980 it was clear that the high degree of isotropy of the microwave background posed problems for a universe containing only ordinary “baryonic” matter, i.e. neutrons and protons.

To be able to form galaxies by the present day, it was necessary that fluctuations occurred in some non-baryonic component. In order to initiate structure formation, this component must have decoupled from the radiation produced in the big bang long before the baryons did. In other words, we cannot make galaxies unless the universe is dominated by “dark matter” that does not, by definition, radiate. As a result we expect dark matter to be present throughout the universe today.

Zel’dovich proposed that a neutrino with a mass of a few tens of electron-volts could form “hot dark matter”, so-called because the neutrinos would be moving at speeds close to the velocity of light. He argued that such hot dark matter could explain the origin of structure in a “top-down” picture, with clusters forming first that later fragmented into galaxies. Computer simulations showed, however, that this did not work and that the alternative “cold dark matter” scenario worked much better. This would lead to “bottom-up” structure formation, in which galaxies were produced first and then merged to form clusters. This approach requires the existence of dark-matter particles that moved around slowly in the early universe. Currently the most successful scenarios are based on cold dark matter, with the most popular candidate for dark matter being the lightest supersymmetric particle, the neutralino. Indeed, several underground experiments are under way to try to detect the neutralino.

However, some additional ingredient appears to be necessary to match the observed spectrum of density fluctuations in the universe today. Proposals for this extra ingredient include an additional repulsive force that acts on large scales, a concept that was first introduced by Einstein in 1917 to achieve a static universe. There could also be a second dark-matter component in the form of a neutrino with a mass of a few electron-volts.

Meanwhile, atmospheric-neutrino experiments appear to have demonstrated that at least one neutrino species does have a non-zero mass. However, the implied mass is not large enough to have an interesting cosmological effect, unless one turns to non-standard scenarios (see “Particle physics: the next generation” by John Ellis, this issue).

An important ingredient in the theory of the origin of structure was the invention of inflation by Alan Guth in 1980. This was introduced to solve the so-called “monopole” and “horizon” problems in cosmology. In the first of these problems, the phase transition associated with the symmetry breaking of the grand unified force in the early universe is likely to have generated a high density of magnetic monopoles. None are observed, however. The horizon problem arises when we look at the microwave background in opposite directions. How do two regions of the universe that have never been in causal contact in a standard expanding-universe model manage to be identical?

The original inflation concept was that at the epoch of symmetry breaking, the universe would be left in a state of “false vacuum”. This would act like a huge cosmological repulsion and drive an exponential expansion for long enough (only about 10-32 s) to solve the horizon problem. The vacuum energy would then be converted into matter and radiation. In the process the required small, primordial density fluctuations would have been generated, and the normal Hubble expansion would have resumed. A great variety of versions of this generic idea have subsequently been invented, with a consequent loss of predictive power.

Current status and future prospects

As we approach the end of this remarkable century for astrophysics and cosmology there seems to be no end to the wealth of new discoveries. The Hubble Deep Field – a very deep map of a small area of the sky made with the Hubble Space Telescope – has extended our picture of star formation in galaxies back to when the universe was only 10% of its current age (figure 3). Meanwhile, infrared and submillimetre surveys of the Hubble deep field using the ISO and the submillimetre array on the James Clerk Maxwell telescope in Hawaii have shown that much of the star formation in galaxies is hidden from optical view by dust.

Figure 3

The new breed of 8 m and 10 m telescopes is making spectroscopy of very distant galaxies almost routine. They are also allowing the identification of distant supernovae, which appear to show that the expansion of the universe is accelerating, presumably due to the cosmological repulsion discussed above. And careful spectroscopic searches have discovered several Jupiter-sized planets around nearby stars.

The mysterious gamma-ray bursts have begun to be pinned down via detection of their X-ray and optical afterglow. These intense outbreaks of radiation have been observed at cosmological distances and seem to be related to the destruction of a neutron star and the formation of a black hole.

The giddy pace of progress is likely to continue for at least the next few decades. Both NASA and the European Space Agency (ESA) are planning future missions to map the microwave background. The Microwave Anisotropy Probe and Planck missions should determine most of the main cosmological parameters to unprecedented precision, and probe the origin of density fluctuations.

ESA’s submillimetre mission, FIRST, the US-European millimetre array, ALMA, and NASA’s Next Generation Space Telescope will form a superbly complementary trio, probing star formation in the early universe. Meanwhile, missions like Gaia, Darwin and the Space Interferometry Mission will try to make progress in discovering and understanding planetary systems.

A series of ground-based experiments and, ultimately, ESA’s Laser Interferometer Space Antenna mission should at last make gravitational-wave astronomy a reality (see Schäfer and Schutz in further reading). And ideas for a ground-based optical telescope with a mirror 100 m in diameter are already in circulation.

Since the time of the ancient Greeks all advances in physics have found immediate application in astrophysics and cosmology. And time and again astronomy has been the driving force for breakthroughs in physics. Our understanding of the astrophysical universe has advanced immeasurably since the beginning of the century. As we enter the next millennium, the vein of discovery is far from exhausted.

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