Cosmology's sole "rate of expansion" is declining

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In summary: Beijing...and people living in Madrid. The distances between Beijing and Madrid are increasing, but the speed of light in a vacuum is unchanged.In summary, the conventional Hubble constant, 68 km/s per Mpc, corresponds to a rate of cosmic expansion that is currently slowing down. The declining rate of expansion H(t) is expected to level out at a positive value H∞. That is the effect of the cosmological constant, in fact H∞2 = Λc2/3.
  • #36
You are both right, because we are approaching both an constant H and exponential expansion - only to be realized in the long term...
 
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  • #37
I was objecting to the specific wording of that quote. Accelerated expansion does not mean that the rate of expansion (H) is 'dropping, however less fast than in the case of decelerated expansion', since H was always dropping more slowly with every year, even during the period of decelerated expansion. It's not a sufficient statement to describe accelerated expansion.
 
  • #38
It may not be a sufficient statement to describe accelerated expansion, but it is not fundamentally wrong. A comparative curve shows that for zero Lambda (with everything else the same), the expansion rate H is indeed 'dropping faster' than is the case with the present Lambda. Such wording may cause confusion though.

upload_2015-11-9_17-23-6.png
 
  • #39
Jorrie said:
It may not be a sufficient statement to describe accelerated expansion, but it is not fundamentally wrong. A comparative curve shows that for zero Lambda (with everything else the same), the expansion rate H is indeed 'dropping faster' than is the case with the present Lambda. Such wording may cause confusion though.
Since this thread is about clarifying confusing language, let me hammer this issue a bit more. I know it's not that big of a problem, but hopefully it's not on the level of pointless semantics.
The problem with wording here is that the presence of lambda does not automatically imply accelerated expansion - not throughout the whole history.
As you said above, that H falls 'less fast' is an indication of the presence of ##\Lambda##. But not of whether the expansion is accelerating or not. H falls slower with lambda regardless of whether the universe undergoes a period of decelerated or accelerated expansion.
So while your statement is true, it is not the same statement as timmdeeg's.

If somebody asks 'what does accelerated expansion of the universe mean'? Answering that it means H falls slower with time is not correct. That is the (partial) answer to the effect of having lambda.
 
  • #40
I agree. It is good to point out the potential semantic pitfalls.
The comparison is nevertheless interesting. It also shows one of the other consequences of a zero Lambda: other things remaining equal, a much smaller present cosmological time - around 9.5 Gy for the observed H0.
 
  • #41
If you are searching for a quantity which is "increasing" when lambda is non-zero, it's simply the velocity of distant galaxies (as measured by redshift, for example).

In Λ=0 case and flat curvature, each individual galaxy slows down (as observed by us). As matter density falls, this "slowing down" also decreases, asymptotically to zero.

In Λ>0 case and flat curvature, galaxies also do slow down *in the early Universe*, but then "slowing down" goes to zero, and then velocity of any given galaxy starts to *increase*.

For laymen, this explanation would be easier than explaining what Huble constant is, why it is not really a constant, and so on.
 
  • #42
nikkkom said:
If you are searching for a quantity which is "increasing" when lambda is non-zero, it's simply the velocity of distant galaxies (as measured by redshift, for example).

But this "velocity" is not a physical velocity; for example, it can be faster than light.

nikkkom said:
For laymen, this explanation would be easier than explaining what Huble constant is, why it is not really a constant, and so on.

I'm not so sure. We get just as many (if not more) questions about how distant galaxies can be moving away from us faster than light as we do about why the Hubble "constant" isn't really constant.
 
  • #43
In Marcus' post #13 above, we have converged on the following:

"The recession speed is what is increasing.
The expansion rate is what is decreasing
."

Do you guys have a problem with these statements?
 
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  • #44
Jorrie said:
Do you guys have a problem with these statements?

Not for the purpose intended, which is to reduce people talking past each other by picking well-defined terms.

But you're still going to have to explain to some people why it's ok that the "recession speed" can be faster than the speed of light. There's no terminology we can pick that will forestall all questions, because the physics itself is counterintuitive in some respects.
 
  • #45
PeterDonis said:
There's no terminology we can pick that will forestall all questions, because the physics itself is counterintuitive in some respects.
Very true! We can only make small gradual improvements. No terminology is perfect. There will always be questions (Maybe that is part of the fun : ^)

PeterDonis said:
We get just as many (if not more) questions about how distant galaxies can be moving away from us faster than light as we do about why the Hubble "constant" isn't really constant.

We have to repeatedly make the point that distance growth (in the expansion process) is not like ordinary motion that we are used to---nobody gets anywhere by it, nobody approaches any goal. It's not relative motion such as is governed by the speed limit.
But distance growth can have a well-defined speed---Δx/Δt. We can try telling them them not to say "galaxies moving away from us" because its distance increase, not relative motion. Actually each of us probably has their own way of responding to that question about fasterthanlight recession. Whatever works.

Peter and Jorrie, glad you are both on hand and taking part in this thread. I've had to be off line a fair amount today and it's also a real advantage to have several different voices.
 
  • #46
The easiest explanation for laymen is not necessarily always the best---it can be a dead end. I tend to think a good explanation of expansion is one that puts a beginner on a path where he or she can eventually get to the Hubble expansion rate H(t) and the Friedman equation---the simple differential equation that governs how H(t) evolves.

The beginner may or may not eventually get to the next level of understanding---but I think we shouldn't block progress with a barrier of non-quantitative verbiage. An explanation shouldn't try to be final---and it shouldn't lead to confusion if the person starts to examine it. Ideally (if possible) should be a bridge to the right next question to ask. Nikkom's post got me thinking along these lines (may not always be practical to attempt).
 
  • #47
PeterDonis said:
But this "velocity" is not a physical velocity; for example, it can be faster than light.

The redshift is physical. And according to it, distant galaxies "accelerate" - if you would repeatedly measure redshift of the very same distant galaxy, it is increasing.
 
  • #48
Jorrie said:
In Marcus' post #13 above, we have converged on the following:

"The recession speed is what is increasing.
The expansion rate is what is decreasing
."

Do you guys have a problem with these statements?

The second statement needs qualification what is meant by "expansion rate".
 
  • #49
Hi marcus,
very interesting thread. I'm a beginner too and new here, trying to learn some equations and more. I wondered what H means?
marcus said:
You could say that the cosmo constant Λ is just an alternative form of the longterm expansion rate H---or vice versa the longterm expansion rate is a concrete practical expression for "dark energy" alias the cosmo constant.
I thought, ∞ (infinite) is undefined. Isn't that a problem?

(sorry for my nickname, couldn't find something else, hope you get hungry ;^)
 
  • #50
nikkkom said:
The second statement needs qualification what is meant by "expansion rate".

Which is explained in other posts in this thread.
 
  • #51
Pizza said:
I thought, ∞ (infinite) is undefined. Isn't that a problem?

##\infty## is just being used as a handy label in this case; the physical meaning is "the value that the Hubble constant approaches in the very far future".
 
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  • #52
Bandersnatch said:
I'd rather say that accelerated expansion means the universe is approaching exponential expansion.
Here's the plot:
View attachment 91581
Thanks. The inflection point of the a-curve separates deceleration and acceleration. In case inflation is included the H-curve also should show an inflection point. But how would you describe its physical meaning? I don't see any.

I think that accelerated expansion means that the second derivative of the scale factor is positive, which includes exponential expansion.
 
  • #53
Thank you, Peter!
 

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