|  Modern Cosmology | 
General Principles, Status, and Issues
  > s.a. anthropic principle; cosmological constant;
  holography; references [including conceptual aspects].
  * Idea: The study of the properties
    of the universe as a whole (observations of the matter and radiation content,
    distribution and evolution, as well as other geometry, topology and dynamics
    of the spacetime itself), including the early universe.
  * Steps, status: 1929,
    Cosmology becomes a science, based on observation, with Hubble's observation
    of the expansion of the universe, and its predictions are subject to
    testing; Proposal of hot Big Bang Theory (the name was first used jokingly
    by Fred Hoyle in a 1949 BBC broadcast); 1965, Observation of the cmb; 1992,
    First COBE results on anisotropy; 1997, First evidence that the expansion
    is accelerating, concept of dark energy; 2003, Emergence of "precision
    cosmology" with the first WMAP results; 2009, The dominant source of
    uncertainty in many observations will soon be cosmic variance as opposed to
    observational noise; 2013, Discrepancy between global (cmb) and local measurements
    of the Hubble constant and age of the Universe; 2014, Detection of B-mode
    polarization at angular scales of a few degrees by the BICEP2 cmb telescope.
  * Central dogma: The same laws
    of physics we can test here on Earth apply everywhere in the universe.
  @ Cosmography: [kinematics of cosmology] Visser GRG(05)gq/04-proc;
    Capozziello et al PRD(08).
 Models:
  see cosmological models; cosmological principle;
  multiverse cosmology; numerical general relativity;
  quantum cosmology.
 Models:
  see cosmological models; cosmological principle;
  multiverse cosmology; numerical general relativity;
  quantum cosmology.
 Observations:
  see cosmic microwave background; large-scale geometry and topology;
  matter content; observational cosmology [including age].
 Observations:
  see cosmic microwave background; large-scale geometry and topology;
  matter content; observational cosmology [including age].
Other Aspects
  > s.a. computational physics; entropy;
  gravitational thermodynamics; Rigidity;
  rotation; Superfluids.
  * Cosmic coincidence problem: The
    fact that the densities of vacuum energy and matter are nearly equal today.
  * Measure problem: The question
    of how to assign normalized probabilities to observations; Probabilities are
    often invoked, e.g., in the context of inflation, but problems arise for various
    reasons, from more formal ones to the fact that such a large universe may have
    many observations occurring at many different spacetime locations.
  @ Statistics, number counts: Colombi et al MNRAS(00)ap/99;
    Szapudi et al MNRAS(00)ap/99,
    MNRAS(99)ap/99;
    > s.a. galaxy distribution.
  @ Complexity and order: Layzer 89 [I-II];
    Hu in(88)gq/95;
    Parker 96 [I];
    Kunz et al PRD(06) [and parameters];
    > s.a. complexity.
  @ Local vs global physics: Ellis IJMPA(02)gq/01;
    Ellis & Stoeger MNRAS(09)-a1001 [local cosmic domain and effective causal limits];
    > s.a. arrow of time; Birkhoff's Theorem;
      expansion rate [local effects]; mach's principle;
      Olbers' Paradox; relativistic cosmology.
  @ Coincidences, tuning, naturality: & Hoyle;
    Carter pr(67)-a0710 [foundation for anthropic principle];
    Griest PRD(02) [proposal];
    Rees in(03)ap/04;
    Carroll Nat(06)apr-ht/05;
    França PLB(06),
    Funkhouser PRS(06),
    PRS(08)phy/06 [proposals];
    del Campo et al PRD(08)-a0806;
    Barreira & Avelino PRD(11)-a1103 [anthropic vs cosmological solutions];
    Sivanandam PRD(13)-a1203
      [coincidence is not a problem, just an artifact of anthropic selection];
    Carroll a1406-in [fine tuning].
  @ The measure problem: Page JCAP(11)-a1011;
    Schiffrin & Wald PRD(12)-a1202.
The Future of the Universe
  > s.a. Big Crunch; Big Trip;
   civilizations [including Doomsday Argument];
  cosmological models.
  * Possibilities: If the cosmic energy density
    will remain constant or strictly increase in the future, the possible fates are:
  - Constant expansion rate: The Hubble
    parameter H(t) = constant, for example if the energy density is
    dominated by a cosmological constant.
  - Pseudo-rip: An intermediate case
    in which H(t) goes to a constant as time goes to infinity.
  - Little rip: H(t)
    goes to infinity as time goes to infinity.
  - Big rip: H(t) goes
    to infinity at a finite time and eventually all local structure will be ripped apart
    by the expansion, for example in the case of phantom energy.
  * Matter and radiation: 2007, Krauss &
    Scherrer predict matter energy density will keep dominating radiation energy density.
  @ General references: Davies 94 [I];
    Krauss & Turner GRG(99);
    Krauss & Starkman SA(99)nov [and life];
    Starobinsky G&C(00)ap/99-conf;
    Goldsmith 00,
    Barrow et al MNRAS(00)ap [including acceleration];
    Avelino et al PLB(01) [and inflation];
    Tipler AIP(01)ap;
    Chiueh & He PRD(02)ap/01 [local structure];
    Hoeneisen ap/02;
    Ćirković AJP(03)feb-ap/02 [eschatology];
    Dąbrowski AdP(06)ap-conf;
    Page PRD(08)ht/06 [future decay];
    Nicolson 07;
    Krauss & Starkman ap/07 [WIMP annihilation];
    Carlip JCAP(07)ht [and variation of constants];
    Krauss & Scherrer GRG(07)-a0704-GRF [return of static universe],
    PRD(07)
    + sr(07)apr [matter domination];
    Bose & Majumdar MNRAS(11)-a1010 [future deceleration];
    Bousso et al PRD(11)-a1009 [eternal inflation and the end of time];
    Lundgren et al a1201 [black hole evaporation and entropy];
    Goldsmith SA(12)mar [new phenomena];
    Bondarescu et al a1305-MG13.
  @ And dark energy: Huterer et al PRD(02)ap;
    Kallosh et al PRD(02) [supergravity model];
    Loeb PRD(02)ap/01;
    Adams et al IJMPD(03)ap [island universes];
    Kallosh & Linde JCAP(03);
    Page JKPS(06)ht/05 [lower limit
      26 Gyr, upper limit exp{1050}–exp{1060} yr];
    news cosmos(19)apr [Big Rip];
    > s.a. dark energy [including late-time interaction].
  @ And astrophysics: Adams & Laughlin RMP(97)ap [evolution of planets, stars, galaxies];
    Loeb JCAP(11)-a1102
    + news pw(11)feb [Milkomeda and the role of hypervelocity stars];
    Lundgren et al a1304 [thermodynamics and supercluster evolution];
    Guillochon & Loeb AMSA-a1411 [using hypervelocity stars].
  @ Big rip: Caldwell et al PRL(03)ap;
    González-Díaz PRD(03)ap,
    PLB(04)ap/03,
    PLB(06);
    Frampton & Takahashi APP(04)ap,
    Frampton ap/04-talk [no dark energy];
    Barboza & Lemos GRG(06)gq [and quantum gravity];
    Alvarenga et al G&C(10)-a0904 [back-reaction from particle creation];
    > s.a. Phantom Field; viscosity.
  @ Other scenarios: Faraoni PRD(03)gq [big smash, superquintessence];
    Frampton et al PRD(11)-a1106 [little rip],
    PRD(12)-a1112 [pseudo-rip];
    Bouhmadi-López et al IJMPD(15)-a1407 [little sibling of the big rip].
What caused the Big Bang? God divided by zero.
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