astro.wikisort.org - ScienceThe Weyl curvature hypothesis, which arises in the application of Albert Einstein's general theory of relativity to physical cosmology, was introduced by the British mathematician and theoretical physicist Roger Penrose in an article in 1979[1] in an attempt to provide explanations for two of the most fundamental issues in physics. On the one hand, one would like to account for a universe which on its largest observational scales appears remarkably spatially homogeneous and isotropic in its physical properties (and so can be described by a simple Friedmann–Lemaître model); on the other hand, there is the deep question on the origin of the second law of thermodynamics.
Hypothesis in physics
This article concerns Roger Penrose's 1979
Weyl curvature hypothesis, which would justify spatial homogeneity and isotropy of the observable part of the universe in the
Big Bang model. A different article discusses
Weyl's postulate, which is an assumption relating to separation of space and time in the
Big Bang model.
Penrose suggests that the resolution of both of these problems is rooted in a concept of the entropy content of gravitational fields. Near the initial cosmological singularity (the Big Bang), he proposes, the entropy content of the cosmological gravitational field was extremely low (compared to what it theoretically could have been), and started rising monotonically thereafter. This process manifested itself e.g. in the formation of structure through the clumping of matter to form galaxies and clusters of galaxies. Penrose associates the initial low entropy content of the universe or the past hypothesis with the effective vanishing of the Weyl curvature tensor of the cosmological gravitational field near the Big Bang. From then on, he proposes, its dynamical influence gradually increased, thus being responsible for an overall increase in the amount of entropy in the universe, and so inducing a cosmological arrow of time.
The Weyl curvature represents such gravitational effects as tidal fields and gravitational radiation. Mathematical treatments of Penrose's ideas on the Weyl curvature hypothesis have been given in the context of isotropic initial cosmological singularities e.g. in the articles.[2][3][4][5] Penrose views the Weyl curvature hypothesis as a physically more credible alternative to cosmic inflation (a hypothetical phase of accelerated expansion in the early life of the universe) in order to account for the presently observed almost spatial homogeneity and isotropy of our universe.[6]
See also
- Gravitational singularity
- Unsolved problems in physics
- White hole
References
Roger Penrose |
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Books |
- The Emperor's New Mind (1989)
- Shadows of the Mind (1994)
- The Road to Reality (2004)
- Cycles of Time (2010)
- Fashion, Faith, and Fantasy in the New Physics of the Universe (2016)
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Coauthored books |
- The Nature of Space and Time (with Stephen Hawking) (1996)
- The Large, the Small and the Human Mind (with Abner Shimony, Nancy Cartwright and Stephen Hawking) (1997)
- White Mars or, The Mind Set Free (with Brian W. Aldiss) (1999)
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Academic works |
- Techniques of Differential Topology in Relativity (1972)
- Spinors and Space-Time: Volume 1, Two-Spinor Calculus and Relativistic Fields (with Wolfgang Rindler) (1987)
- Spinors and Space-Time: Volume 2, Spinor and Twistor Methods in Space-Time Geometry (with Wolfgang Rindler) (1988)
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Concepts |
- Twistor theory
- Spin network
- Abstract index notation
- Black hole bomb
- Geometry of spacetime
- Cosmic censorship
- Weyl curvature hypothesis
- Penrose inequalities
- Penrose interpretation of quantum mechanics
- Moore–Penrose inverse
- Newman–Penrose formalism
- Penrose diagram
- Penrose–Hawking singularity theorems
- Penrose inequality
- Penrose process
- Penrose tiling
- Penrose triangle
- Penrose stairs
- Penrose graphical notation
- Penrose transform
- Penrose–Terrell effect
- Orchestrated objective reduction/Penrose–Lucas argument
- FELIX experiment
- Trapped surface
- Andromeda paradox
- Conformal cyclic cosmology
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Related |
- Lionel Penrose (father)
- Oliver Penrose (brother)
- Jonathan Penrose (brother)
- Shirley Hodgson (sister)
- John Beresford Leathes (grandfather)
- Illumination problem
- Quantum mind
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На других языках
[de] Weylkrümmungshypothese
Die Weylkrümmungshypothese (benannt nach Hermann Weyl), die im Rahmen der Anwendung von Albert Einsteins Allgemeiner Relativitätstheorie in der Kosmologie auftritt, wurde im Jahre 1979 von dem britischen Mathematiker und theoretischen Physiker Sir Roger Penrose in einem Artikel[1] vorgeschlagen, welcher Erklärungen für zwei grundlegende Probleme in der Physik zu geben versucht. Einerseits würde man gerne verstehen, warum unser Universum auf den größten zugänglichen Beobachtungsskalen bemerkenswert räumlich homogen und isotrop erscheint (und somit mathematisch durch ein einfaches Friedmann-Lemaître-Modell beschrieben werden kann), andererseits soll damit die fundamentale Frage nach dem Ursprung des Zweiten Hauptsatzes der Thermodynamik angesprochen werden.
- [en] Weyl curvature hypothesis
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