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Plasma cosmology

Plasma cosmology is a non-standard cosmological view which relies on the electromagnetic effects of plasma for explaining the large-scale structure of the universe, energy storage, and energy flow between separate areas of the universe, among other things.

Overview

Within astrophysics, plasma physics and electromagnetic fields are active areas of research. Many astrophysical bodies are believed to be made of plasma, and even within the conventional Big Bang cosmology, the entire early universe consisted of plasma before recombination (the process in which electrons become confined to protons to make neutral atoms) occurred.

Despite the general importance of plasma in astrophysics, and the assertions of the standard model that electromagnetic forces may be important for describing local phenomena, the standard model continues to delineate that these forces are not important at large cosmological distances. The reason for this is generally believed that unlike the other three forces which are attractive only, electromagnetism is both attractive and repulsive and over large cosmological distances, electromagnetic forces are believed to cancel each other. This is not always the case however. It can be shown that the electromagnetic forces are several orders of magnitude greater than the gravitational forces in certain plasmas and that the electromagnetic forces can have a longer range than gravitational forces. On the largest scales, evidence that plasmas exhibit external forces on physical objects such as galaxies is the same as that which has led standard model researchers to derive the existence of both dark matter and dark energy.

In the mid-1990s, interest in plasma cosmologies was piqued by a limited few in the standard (Big Bang) cosmological community, mostly as a "fallback" theory, in case COBE failed to discover variations in the CMB (cosmic microwave background) or in case primordial helium abundances turned out to be unexplainable by standard cosmologies. This interest rapidly waned as more precise measurements, such as those from COBE, appeared to support standard cosmologies in the late 1990's.

Both Anthony Peratt and Eric J. Lerner have proposed how the CMB can support plasma cosmology. In particular, Lerner has shown how the COBE results themselves can support plasma cosmology by means of an ambient radiation field due to synchrotron radiation. This model fails to predict detail modelling from the CMB anisotropy peaks in the power spectrum. In particular, it fails to predict the 1 degree mode on the sky or the strength of this feature. Plasma cosmology apologists point out that researchers at the University of Durham have analyzed results from the WMAP probe and discovered cluster correlations in certain modes of the CMB's anisotropies. A specific kind of tiny measured anisotropies in the CMB are seen to correspond to the location of local galactic clusters. The Durham researchers attribute it to the standard model's Sunyaev-Zeldovich effect and since this effect isn't universal (the majority of inhomogeneities do not correspond to clusters), it is unclear how or if Lerner's cosmology could predict this feature.

Alfven's model

One of the first and most well developed models of plasma cosmology was put forth in 1965 by Hannes Alfven. Alfven was a Nobel laureate, a laboratory researcher in plasma and space physics. In his model, the universe exists as a mixture of matter and antimatter which he called ambiplasma. The cellular regions of matter and antimatter can mutually annihilate, leaving protons and electrons. This can cause a rapid expansion of the region local to the annihilation, which Alfven considered as a possible explanation for the observed apparent expansion of the universe. The Alfven model deals with the problem of cancellation explained above by postulating that the regions of matter and anti-matter are larger than the presently observable universe, and are separated by double-layers in the plasma. Alfven heavily stressed the importance of the cellular and filamentary nature of plasmas at any scale, from the laboratory to the galactic.

Alfven's model possesses a number of highly appealing properties. Firstly, it addresses the question of what happened before expansion. Alfven postulated that the universe has always existed, and that the expansion we might now be seeing is merely a local phase of a much larger history. Secondly, the model does not invoke any exotic physics (other than antimatter, which has been verified on Earth in high-energy colliders), instead modelling the universe using the well-understood electromagnetic forces along with gravity. Indeed, Alfven based his ideas on experimental work in plasma physics here on earth. He strongly advocated experimental work as a necessary and dominant part of any theory. Even in the field of earth-based plasma physics, he had to overcome the inertia of the purely theoretical approach among his colleagues, whose analysis could not make any accurate predictions.

Criticisms of Alfven's model

Alfven proposed that the bubble of matter we are in is larger than the observable universe. This brought the question of how one would go about testing the model if the very large structures that it predicts cannot be observed. However, many stuctures can be observed, such as intergalactic Birkeland currents, double-layers, velocity-selection effects at multiple scales, etc.

Unfortunately, from a theoretical point of view, there remain a number of problems with Alfven's model. Alfven did not formalize his model to the point where it is possible to perform numerical simulations similar to those now routinely performed to model the behavior of early galaxies in the standard cosmology and which are used to predict the correlation function of the universe. Instead, Alfven, in his usual style, outlined a very general view of how galaxies are disc-generators. He was quite unconcerned with conforming his model so that it can make the same predictions as the Big Bang.

Although 3-D formation simulations of single galaxies have been performed using a plasma model (see articles by Anthony Peratt) wherein electromagnetic forces are taken into account along with gravitation, there have been no published papers which attempt to calculate correlation functions and therefore allow detailed comparison with observations. However, when one compares the simulation cross-section with radio isophotes of AGN, one sees a remarkable resemblance. This resemblance is not surprising, however, since it is well-understood that the high-energies associated with AGN should be similar to plasmas.

Another problem is, ironically, that plasma cosmologies depend on physics which is, while not completely well-understood, quite well-documented from laboratory experimentation. Because the standard Big Bang model involves physics that is poorly understood, one can adjust Big Bang models to fit observations by invoking wiggle room parameters and exotic physics, such as the existence of as-yet unobserved particles. Due to its empirical foundations (Alfven was a laboratory physicist at heart, developing power-transmission systems and the like), it is much harder to modify Alfven's model to fit cosmological observations.

From an observational point of view, the gamma rays emitted by even small amounts of matter/antimatter annihilation should be easily visible using gamma ray telescopes. However, such gamma rays have not been observed. One could rescue this model by proposing, as Alfven does, that the bubble of matter we are in is larger than the observable universe. This then brings up the question of how one would go about testing the model if the structures that it predicts cannot be observed. In order to test the model, one would have to find some signature of the model in current observations, and this requires that the model be formalized to the point where detailed quantitative predictions can be made. That opens the theoretical problem mentioned in the last paragraph.

Other work

It must be remembered that Alfven's model of the universe is not the only model within the field of plasma cosmology. Alfven did play a very large role in founding the fields of plasma physics and plasma cosmology, however many physicists have expounded on his model and there are in fact versions today which greatly account for much of the observable phenomena in the universe, including the CMB, the distribution of galaxies, the formation of galaxies, redshift, large-scale energy flow and storage, etc..

Eric Lerner and Anthony Peratt have both played a large role in further developing this cosmology. Lerner has taken a different view on the anti-matter problem, dismissing parts of it and formulating a more approachable physical mechanism to account for quasar->galaxy formation. ... more to come

Redshifts

Although there are many local redshifting mechanisms observed in laboratory experimentation with plasmas, one problem in using a majority of them to explain cosmological redshifts is that it is difficult to account for a change in the energy of a photon going through plasma without photon scattering (changing the photon's direction of propagation.) In some non-linear optical phenomena there are forms of scattering in which the direction of propagation of the photons is not changed. Specifically, one promising candidate for astrophysical application is Forward Brillouin Scattering, found locally in Laser Fusion devices, as an example. This form of forward scattering causes a redshift and a broadening of spectral lines without changing the direction of propagation of the incident light.

Future work

There is much work to be done in this field. Lerner's model of quasar and galaxy formation can be compared with Halton Arp's observations of quasars and AGN. The non-linear redshift phenomena can also be compared with Arp's data and Peratt's data.

Within plasma cosmology, there have been no published papers which make predictions on the primordial helium abundance (although this subject is addressed in Lerner's book,) or which calculate correlation functions.

Figures in plasma cosmology

The following physicists and astronomers helped, either directly or indirectly, to develop this field:

  • Hannes Alfven - Along with Birkeland, fathered Plasma Cosmology and was a pioneer in laboratory based plasma physics. Received the only Nobel Prize ever awarded to a plasma physicist.
  • Halton Arp - Astronomer famous for his work on anomalous redshifts, "Quasar, Redshifts and Controversies".
  • Willard Harrison Bennett - The z-pinch was first called the "Bennett pinch". Also invented radio frequency mass spectrometry.
  • Kristian Birkeland - First suggested that polar electric currents [or auroral electrojets] are connected to a system of filaments (now called "Birkeland Currents") that flowed along geomagnetic field lines into and away from the polar region. Suggested that space is not a vacuum but is instead filled with plasma. Pioneered the technique of "laboratory astrophysics", which became directly responsible for our present understanding of the aurora.
  • David Bohm - Contributed to quantum mechanics and relativity theory, as well as developing the Bohm interpretation [a non-local hidden variable].
  • Max Born - Formulated the interpretation of the probability density for ψ*ψ in the Schrodinger equation of quantum mechanics.
  • Oscar Buneman - Pioneer of computational plasma physics and plasma simulation. Contributed greatly to our ability to model plasmas of any scale.
  • Erwin Findlay-Freundlich - Introduced experiments for which the general theory of relativity could be tested by astronomical observations based on the gravitational redshift. Advocated tired-light mechanisms.
  • Charles Edouard Guillaume - Determined the correct temperature of space first.
  • Irving Langmuir - Developed electron temperature concepts and a thermionic probe, the Langmuir probe. Coined the term "plasma" to hint at the life-like behavior of this state of matter.
  • Eric J. Lerner - Showed that the intergalactic medium absorbs and attenuates radio frequencies, and invalidated the "primordial" interpretation of the CMB. Wrote a comprehensive introductory book to the subject of Plasma Cosmology, "The Big Bang Never Happened".
  • Louis Néel - Contributed fundamental research on and discoveries in antiferromagnetism and ferrimagnetism.
  • Anthony Peratt - Developed computer simulations of galaxy formation using Birkeland currents along with gravity. Along with Alfven, organized international conferences on Plasma Cosmology.
  • Andrey Dmitriyevich Sakharov - Proposed the development of the tokamak device for use in controlled thermonuclear fusion.
  • Nikola Tesla - Developed the rotating magnetic field model and the Dynamic theory of gravity.
  • Gerrit L. Verschuur - Radio Astronomer, writer of "Interstellar matters : essays on curiosity and astronomical discovery" and "Cosmic catastrophes".
  • Jean-Pierre Vigier - Pioneered the causal stochastic interpretation.
  • Emil Wolf - Advanced spectroscopy of partially coherent radiation, and the theory of direct scattering and inverse scattering.

See also

Links and resources

Publications

  • E. J. Lerner, "Intergalactic radio absorption and the Cobe data". Astrophys. Space Sci. 227, 61-81 (1995)
  • A. L. Peratt, "Plasma and the universe: Large-scale dynamics, filamentation, and radiation". Astrophys. Space Sci. 227, 97-107 (1995).
  • E. J. Lerner, "On the problem of Big-bang nucleosynthesis". Astrophys. Space Sci. 227, 145-149 (1995).
  • C. M. Snell and A. L. Peratt, "Rotation velocity and neutral hydrogen distribution dependency on magnetic-field strength in spiral galaxies". Astrophys. Space Sci. 227, 167-173 (1995).
  • A. L. Peratt, "Plasma cosmology". IEEE T. Plasma Sci. 18, 1-4 (1990).
  • Meierovich, "Limiting current in general relativity" Gravitation and Cosmology 3 (1), 29-37 (1997).
  • W. C. Kolb, "How can spirals persist?". Astrophysics and Space Science 227, 175-186 (1995).
  • J. E. Brandenburg, "A model cosmology based on gravity-electromagnetism unification". Astrophysics and Space Science 227, 133-144 (1995).
  • J. Kanipe, "The pillars of cosmology: a short history and assessment". Astrophysics and Space Science 227, 109-118 (1995).
  • G. Arcidiacono, "Plasma physics and big-bang cosmology". Hadronic Journal 18, 306-318 (1995).

Related Books

  • Cosmic Plasma., Alfven D. Hannes, Reidel Pub Co., February 1981 164 pages ISBN 9027711518
  • Big Bang Never Happened., Eric J. Lerner. Vintage Books, October 1992., 496 pages ISBN 067974049X
  • Physics of the Plasma Universe., Anthony L. Peratt, Springer-Verlag, 1991?, ISBN 0387975756

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