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4 - Cosmological nucleosynthesis: production of H and He

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  04 September 2009

Igor Tolstikhin
Affiliation:
Kola Scientific Centre, Russian Academy of Sciences
Jan Kramers
Affiliation:
Universität Bern, Switzerland
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Summary

The expanding Universe and the Big Bang hypothesis

Friedmann (1922) was the first to postulate the model of an expanding Universe that originated in one explosion-like event. Soon afterwards Hubble (1929) discovered the relationship between the redshifts, due to the Doppler effect, in the spectra of distant stars, galaxies or galactic clusters and the distances to these objects: the further the object the larger the redshift, i.e. the greater the outward velocity (see Section 4.3). These relationships were considered as the first important confirmation of Friedmann's model, which is now generally accepted.

Later, further supporting evidence was found. The uniform He/H ratio in astrophysical objects with low metallicity, discussed in Section 3.1, was shown to be identical to that predicted by the Big Bang nucleosynthesis (BBN) model. Further, important support for the Big Bang hypothesis was the observation of the cosmic microwave background radiation (Penzias and Wilson, 1965), which had been predicted by Gamow's Big Bang model. From recent high-precision satellite-based measurements of this radiation, several important cosmological parameters including the Hubble parameter and the primeval D/H ratio have been inferred, and these are in excellent agreement with the values actually observed (Spergel et al., 2003). Also, all independent estimates of the age of BBN and of the most ancient objects formed in the Galaxy are remarkably consistent (Sections 4.3 and 7.2).

Type
Chapter
Information
The Evolution of Matter
From the Big Bang to the Present Day
, pp. 44 - 51
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2008

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