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Static universe - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Static universe
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

(Redirected from Einstein universe) A static universe , also referred to as a "stationary" or "Einstein" universe, is a model in which space is neither expanding nor contracting. Albert Einstein proposed such a model as his preferred cosmology in 1917.[citation needed] He added a positive cosmological constant to his equations of general relativity to counteract the attractive effects of gravity on ordinary matter, which would otherwise cause the universe to either collapse or expand forever. This motivation evaporated after proposals first by the astrophysicist and Roman Catholic priest, Georges Lematre, and then by astronomer Edwin Hubble, that the universe appears to be not static, but expanding; in particular, Hubble researched data from the observations made by astronomer Vesto Slipher to confirm a relationship between redshift and distance, which forms the basis for the modern expansion paradigm. According to George Gamow this led Einstein to declare this cosmological model, and especially the introduction of the cosmological constant, his "biggest blunder".[1] Even after Hubble's, Slipher's, and Lematre's observations, Fritz Zwicky proposed that a static universe could still be viable if there was an alternative explanation of redshift due to a mechanism that would cause light to lose energy as it traveled through space, a concept that would come to be known as "tired light". However, subsequent cosmological observations have shown that this model is not a viable alternative either, leading nearly all astrophysicists to conclude that the static universe is not the correct model of our universe.[citation needed]

Contents
1 Einstein's universe 2 Other problems with the model 3 See also 4 References

Einstein's universe
Einstein's static universe is closed (i.e. has hyperspherical topology and positive spatial curvature), and contains uniform dust and a positive cosmological constant with value precisely , where is Newtonian gravitational constant, is the energy density of the matter in the universe and curvature of space of the Einstein universe is equal to is the speed of light. The radius of

The Einstein universe is one of Friedmann's solutions to Einstein's field equation for dust with density constant , and radius of curvature . It is the only non-trivial static solution to Friedmann's [ citation needed ] equations.

, cosmological

Because the universe is now known to be expanding the Einstein universe is no longer regarded as a viable model for our universe. Moreover, it is unstable in the sense that any change in either the value of the cosmological constant, the matter density, or the spatial curvature will result in a universe that either expands and accelerates forever or recollapses to a big crunch.[citation needed] After observations indicated that the universe was expanding, most physicists of the twentieth century assumed the cosmological constant is zero. If so (absent some other form of dark energy), the expansion of the universe would be decelerating. However, with the discovery of the accelerating universe, a positive cosmological constant has been revived as a simple explanation for dark energy.

Other problems with the model


Aside from Hubble's law, the en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Einstein_universe cosmic microwave background radiation is used as empirical evidence of the Big Bang
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Static universe - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Aside from Hubble's law, the cosmic microwave background radiation is used as empirical evidence of the Big Bang model. A static universe model has to explain this radiation in some other way. Also there has to be some process of "recreation of Hydrogen" since if the universe was not created some finite time ago, as in the Big Bang model, the stars would otherwise all have run out of fuel (Hydrogen) by now, if there is not an effective disintegration process.

See also
Steady state theory Milne model

References
1. ^ In George Gamow's autobiography, My World Line (1970), he says of Einstein: "Much later, when I was discussing cosmological problems with Einstein, he remarked that the introduction of the cosmological term was the biggest blunder of his life." Retrieved from "http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Static_universe&oldid=570858540" Categories: Exact solutions in general relativity Albert Einstein Obsolete scientific theories
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en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Einstein_universe

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