Sunday, July 12, 2009

CMB Anisotropies (part 2)

The Dipole
The above picture is an image of the temperature variation in the CMB with the contrast turned up to 1 part in 1000. Therefore, there is about 0.1% difference between the left side and the right side. This particular pattern appears fairly often in physics and is known as a dipole (there are two "poles" where the temperature is hotter or colder and the rest of the distribution stems from those two centers). Why is there such a distinct pattern in the temperature distribution?

The answer lies in the Doppler effect, which we've talked about at length before. In fact, we've talked about everything we need to explain this pattern. I've mentioned that the temperature is similar to the energy, so that we're effectively showing the energy of the CMB photons as a function of where they are coming from. And we know that the energy of a photon is related to its frequency. Therefore, the above picture shows the change in frequency of photons coming from one direction or another. We know that galaxies rotate, including our own. And finally, we know from the Doppler effect that the relative velocities of a source and an observer can change the observed frequency of light.

Mom, can you now guess why this pattern looks the way it does (I'm not sure how I feel about directly addressing anyone in this blog, since there's clearly no possibility of a direct response, but I'll leave it for now)? If you guessed that the Earth's motion through the galaxy resulted in a Doppler shift of the CMB photons depending on whether they are coming from in front of us or behind us, you would be exactly right. In effect, the Earth (and the Sun and the entire solar system) is moving towards one of those poles and away from the other, and thus we see the Doppler shifted dipole pattern shown above.

That is pretty interesting, but not revolutionary. We understand the Doppler effect and we know our galaxy is rotating, so if that were the only thing in the CMB anisotropy, it wouldn't be that big a deal. The real excitement (I keep pushing it forward, don't I?) arrives when we subtract the dipole effect (it's fully understood, so we can do that), leaving the smaller part in one hundred thousand variations.



Tiny variations
Finally (finally!), I will talk about what the CMB is showing us. The above is a map with the contrast turned up to that part in 100,000. And now there's no obvious pattern, which is good, because the universe is supposed to look the same in all directions. Basically, these little fluctuations are the imprint of noise in the very early universe (remember, at one point I described the CMB as a snapshot of the universe at 400,000 years old). And by studying the distribution of this noise, we can infer things about the properties of the universe.

I plan on going into this in more detail (with a detour through something called Fourier analysis), but using the CMB, we can understand the age of the universe (13 and a half billion years), the geometry of the universe (flat), the amount of energy and density in the universe (the pie charts in the first post of this blog, including the 23% accounted for by dark matter [there is a connection between this and what I have been talking about until now, after all]), the rate of expansion of the universe, and other things. I think (and I hope you agree with me) that this is really impressive - this one measurement has answered several deeply fundamental cosmological questions about how the universe works all in one go, just by carefully studying the snow picked up by the rabbit ears on my mom's now useless analog television set.

4 comments:

  1. is it possible these microwaves are coming from inside the earth?

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  2. also, the photons from seperate sides of the universe... the horizon problem. Could the universe be (i really don't know how to word this) if you pass through one end, you come out of the other. I can't decide wether or not there should be a question mark there. ^^ i enjoyed reading this blog, answered a few of my questions

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  3. Anonymous,
    The microwaves couldn't be coming from inside the earth because microwaves don't travel very far through most materials. If you have a microwave in your kitchen, when you turn it on, those waves aren't getting outside of the microwave. In fact, they are getting absorbed in whatever food product you put inside, because the waves don't get far once they are in the food. Therefore, the CMB could only be coming reaching us through the vacuum of space.

    As for your second question, we are getting into speculative regions here. Inflation is a theory that hopes to explain the horizon problem, but it has several problems and we don't know why it would have occurred in the first place. While it's doubtful you could go out one end and come back in the other, it would have been possible for the universe to be curved, just like the surface of the earth. However, astrophysics measurements (including the CMB) suggest that the earth is actually flat. I'm getting to that in the new posts.

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