Basic theory underlying the quasi-steady state cosmology
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Date
1995-02-08
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Publisher
Royal Society Publishing
Abstract
Outside cosmology,
the
procedure normally
followed in science
requires
the inte-
gration
of
hyperbolic partial differential equations subject
to initial data
given
on a free
surface, which is
usually
taken to be a time section of
spacetime. The
initial data are determined in
experimental science from observation and the re-
sults of the
integrations
are also checked
by observations. Friedmann
(Big Bang)
cosmology suffers, however, from the fact that the observations cannot determine
initial conditions. Thus in that
theory
the initial conditions have
only
the weak
status of
guesses.
There is also some
question whether the correct equations are
being used, since
the
gravitational equations of that
cosmology
are not scale
invariant,
a situation
unlike the rest of
physics.
Since matter exists in what is
supposed
to be a
space
of
finite
temporal
duration its
origin
should be
explained, working
from a suitable
lagrangian
and action. Otherwise the
origin
is
placed outside science. This is what
is done in
Big Bang cosmology.
In this
paper we depart
from the standard procedure by
first
deriving grav-
itational
equations that are scale
invariant,
whence it is shown that in a scale
invariant
gravitational theory particles
have the
property that the two
lengths
associated with
them,
the
Compton wavelength
and
gravitational radius, must
be comparable,
i.e.
they
are Planck particles.
It is then shown that the
theory
has the scope to
explain the
genesis
of the so-called
cosmological constant, and
the
usually required magnitude of the
cosmological
constant is derived.
When interactions other than
gravitation
are
included,
Planck particles are un-
stable. The effect of
instability
on
newly
created Planck particles
is to introduce
terms into the
gravitational equations
additional to those of
general relativity.
In
particular,
there are
negative pressure
terms which act to
expand the universe.
The
energy
terms are such as to
suggest
that
particle creation must be of an ex-
plosive nature and that it must occur in the
neighbourhoods
of
highly compacted
bodies,
a
property
which appears
to
provide
a connection between
cosmological
theory
and
high-energy astrophysics.
Description
Keywords
Big bang cosmology, Scale invariant gravitational equations, Planck particles, Origin of the light elements, Creation of matter