Abstract
In standard Big Bang cosmology, the universe expanded from a very dense, hot and opaque initial state. The light that was last scattered about 380,000 years later, when the universe had become transparent, has been redshifted and is now seen as thermal radiation with a temperature of 2.7 K, the cosmic microwave background (CMB). However, since light escapes faster than matter can move, it is prudent to ask how we, made of matter from this very source, can still see the light. In order for this to be possible, the light must take a return path of the right length. A curved return path is possible in spatially closed, balloon-like models, but in standard cosmology, the universe is “flat” rather than balloon-like, and it lacks a boundary surface that might function as a reflector. Under these premises, radiation that once filled the universe homogeneously cannot do so permanently after expansion, and we cannot see the last scattering event. It is shown that the traditional calculation of the CMB temperature is inappropriate and that light emitted by any source inside the Big Bang universe earlier than half its “conformal age” can only become visible to us via a return path. Although often advanced as the best evidence for a hot Big Bang, the CMB actually tells against a formerly smaller universe and so do also distant galaxies.
Highlights
In 1964, Penzias & Wilson (1965) serendipitously discovered the cosmic microwave background (CMB), a thermal radiation with a temperature of 2.7 K
The paper "Does standard cosmology really predict the cosmic microwave background?" by Hartmut Traunmüller examines the claim made by the Big Bang model that the cosmic microwave background (CMB) has its origin in the thermal light of last scattering at the time of recombination
The paper explains that the CMB originated from matter that was contained inside the last scattering surface (LSS) with comoving radius of about 0.95 Gly
Summary
In 1964, Penzias & Wilson (1965) serendipitously discovered the cosmic microwave background (CMB), a thermal radiation with a temperature of 2.7 K. Alpher & Herman (1948) and Alpher et al (1967), who were contemplating thermonuclear reactions in the expanding universe (for historical perspectives see Naselsky et al (2006) and Alpher (2012), expected a thermal radiation with about 5 K as a residual of a hot Big Bang They built on Tolman’s studies (Tolman, 1931; Tolman, 1934) of model universes filled with blackbody radiation as a thermodynamic fluid, so that “The model of the expanding universe with which we deal, is one containing a homogeneous, isotropic mixture of matter and blackbody radiation” (Alpher & Herman, 1975). Is the topic of the opinion article discussed accurately in the context of the current literature? No
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