zeion Posted March 15, 2010 Posted March 15, 2010 Hello. This is question for my course work, I was wondering if I could get some insight, here is the question: Assume that the vast majority of the photons in the present Universe are cosmic microwave radiation photons that are a relic of the big bang. For simplicity, also assume that all the photons have the energy corresponding to the wavelength of the peak of a 2.73K black-body radiation curve. At Approximately what redshift will the energy density in radiation be equal to the energy density in matter? (hint: work out the energy density in photons at the present time. Then work it out for baryons, assuming a proton for a typical baryon. Remember how the two quantities scale with redshift to work out when the energy density is the same.) [math] \rho_M \propto a^{-3} [/math] [math] \rho_\gamma \propto a^{-4} [/math] [math] T \propto a^{-1} [/math] [math] 1 + z = \frac{v}{v_0} = \frac{\lambda_0}{\lambda} = \frac{a(t_0)}{a(t)} [/math] How do I calculate the energy density of photons and protons at the present time? Do I use E = mc^2?
Radical Edward Posted March 15, 2010 Posted March 15, 2010 what are your variables there? It's been a while since I worked with that sort of stuff. lambda I guess is wavelength, v, velocity, t and to are time, rhos are density, but what about a and z?
zeion Posted March 15, 2010 Author Posted March 15, 2010 a is the scale factor for the size of the universe where the a = 1 at the present time.. and 0.5 sometime in the past when it was half the size, etc.. and z is the redshift.
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