Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Prologue
- Part I Historical
- 1 Cosmogony Myths and Primitive Notions
- 2 First Qualitative Physics: The Newton–Bentley Exchange
- 3 Glimpses of Structure
- 4 Number Counts and Distributions
- 5 Seeds of Grand Creation
- 6 Clusters versus Correlations
- 7 The Expanding Search for Homogeneity
- Part II Descriptions of Clustering
- Part III Gravity and Correlation Functions
- Part IV Gravity and Distribution Functions
- Part V Computer Experiments for Distribution Functions
- Part VI Observations of Distribution Functions
- Part VII Future Unfoldings
- Bibliography
- Index
5 - Seeds of Grand Creation
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 19 January 2010
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Prologue
- Part I Historical
- 1 Cosmogony Myths and Primitive Notions
- 2 First Qualitative Physics: The Newton–Bentley Exchange
- 3 Glimpses of Structure
- 4 Number Counts and Distributions
- 5 Seeds of Grand Creation
- 6 Clusters versus Correlations
- 7 The Expanding Search for Homogeneity
- Part II Descriptions of Clustering
- Part III Gravity and Correlation Functions
- Part IV Gravity and Distribution Functions
- Part V Computer Experiments for Distribution Functions
- Part VI Observations of Distribution Functions
- Part VII Future Unfoldings
- Bibliography
- Index
Summary
One thought fills immensity.
BlakeThe clustering of galaxies became a challenge that
devoured Lemaître's research in cosmology. Time and
again Shapley demanded that the theory of the
expanding universe account for concentrations of
nebulae he was charting close to the Milky Way.
Lemaître wanted foremost to satisfy the demand. Yet
to the end of his life the solution eluded him.
Deprit (1983)Two of the three main ingredients for understanding the universe during the first half of the twentieth century were observational: its immense size and its expansion. The third was Einstein's general theory of relativity. It related the force of gravity to the structure of spacetime. Two years after his definitive account of the theory, Einstein (1917) applied it to cosmology. His first model, introducing the cosmological constant,was static – matter without motion. Shortly afterward deSitter (1917a,b) discovered an expanding but empty solution of Einstein's equations – motion without matter. Then Friedmann (1922) found the intermediate solutions with both expansion and matter, which Lemaître (1927) independently rediscovered. Eddington (1930, 1931a) was about to publish them independently yet again when Lemaître, who had formerly been his student, gently reminded him that they were already known. So Eddington publicized these solutions more widely and also showed that Einstein's static universe would become unstable if condensations formed within it.
A small fraction of cosmological thought during this period strayed from the homogeneous models to the nature and origin of structure in the universe.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- The Distribution of the GalaxiesGravitational Clustering in Cosmology, pp. 33 - 40Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 1999