Abstract

The prevailing constant cosmological model agrees with observational evidence including the observed red shift, Big Bang Nucleosynthesis (BBN), and the current rate of acceleration. It assumes that matter contributes 27% to the current density of the universe, with the rest (73%) coming from dark energy represented by the Einstein cosmological parameter in the governing Friedmann-Robertson-Walker equations, derived from Einstein’s equations of general relativity. However, the principal problem is the extremely small value of the cosmological parameter (~10−52 m2). Moreover, the dark energy density represented by is presumed to have remained unchanged as the universe expanded by 26 orders of magnitude. Attempts to overcome this deficiency often invoke a variable model. Cosmic constraints from action principles require that either both and remain time-invariant or both vary in time. Here, we propose a variable cosmological model consistent with the latest red shift data, the current acceleration rate, and BBN, provided the split between matter and dark energy is 18% and 82%. decreases (, where is the normalized cosmic time) and increases () with cosmic time. The model results depend only on the chosen value of at present and in the far future and not directly on .

1. Introduction

The Newtonian gravitational parameter is critical in both cosmology and quantum mechanics. It occurs in the former as a source term in Einstein’s general relativity equations, the basis of all cosmological models. In the latter, it is fundamental to the definition of the Planck scales. The standard cosmological model assumes that is invariant with cosmic time. Likewise, the cosmological parameter , a well-established surrogate for dark energy density, is generally assumed to be another universal constant. However, its value of 10−52 m2 is 50 orders of magnitude less than what was predicted by the Glashow-Weinberg-Salam weak interaction theory [1] and 107 orders of magnitude less than what was required for grand unification [2]. If indeed represents dark energy density, then is it reasonable for it to be cosmic time-invariant as the universe expanded 26 orders of magnitude from the Big Bang to the present? Instead, could it have decayed from much larger values in the cosmic past? The central issues explored here are as follows. Are time-dependent and cosmologies consistent with modern astronomical observations, especially the red shift data as reported in [3]? Are they consistent with Big Bang Nucleosynthesis (BBN)? Are they consistent with the current observed rate of acceleration?

Motivated by the huge disparity between the distance scales in the fundamental force fields and the size of the universe, Dirac [4, 5] proposed a time-dependent cosmology. There has been considerable interest in cosmologies with variable parameters ever since. See [624] for recent studies and the references cited in [13] for citations to earlier research on the topic. These models considered either or both and Λ to be time-dependent. Most investigators take but allowed to be either proportional or inversely proportional to time . However, dimensional analysis [25] suggests that and cannot vary independently and so does the action principle [26]. Using action principle, Krori et al. [26] developed a Friedmann-Robertson-Walker (FRW) cosmology with a variable as a function of . Jamil and Debnath [17] extended that work with a model in which , where is the Hubble parameter. K. P. Singh and N. I. Singh [13] explored a cosmological model with also, but with matter in the form of a viscous fluid. Building on Bergmann’s action principle [27, 28], Esposito-Farèse and Polarski [29] developed a general scalar-tensor model that allowed for variable cosmological parameters. This model was extended by Riazuelo and Uzan [30] and used by Ellis and Uzan [31] in their critique of variable parameter cosmologies. Caldwell et al. [32] examined the possibility that there is a significant contribution to energy density of the universe from a component, like a cosmic scalar field, which has an equation of state different from that of matter, radiation, and cosmological constant.

The rest of this paper is organized as follows. Section 2 reviews the theory for cosmic time-dependent and . Section 3 explores the compatibility of the model with BBN. Section 4 compares the model results with the latest red shift data as summarized in [3]. Section 5 deals with the implications of variable cosmology. We conclude with a brief commentary on what remains unknown.

2. Theory

Cosmological models are based on the FRW equations for the scale factor (e.g., [26]):Here, is density, is pressure, and dots denote cosmic time derivative. Note that we have omitted the curvature terms, since there is solid evidence that the universe is flat [33], as well as the shear terms that are often included [26]. As a consequence of an action principle, Krori et al. [26] showed that the use of (1) requires that and be both time-invariant or that and be both time-dependent.

In the latter case, an action principle constraint determines the covariation of and . This can be seen by differentiating the first equation of (1) and substituting for from the second equation to obtainThis equation is the result of vanishing divergence of the Einstein tensor [17, 26]. The usual energy-momentum conservation equation leads to [17, 26] The use of (3) in (2) shows that so that and must both be time-invariant or and must both be time-dependent, consistent with the findings of [17, 26]. Also, recall the equation of state:with for matter and for radiation.

Now return to (1). The natural time and length scales in the problem are  s (13.81 Gyr) and  m (where  m s−1 and  km s−1 Mpc−1 =  s−1). Using these to normalize (1) yieldswhere and the primes denote derivatives with respect to normalized time . Also,where subscript 0 denotes current values. The critical density of the universe isTake the “vacuum” density asBecause matter density is inversely proportional to the volume and the total entropy of radiation is constant, so that the first equation of (6) becomes The consensus from modern observations [34] is as follows:Since , using the Cosmic Microwave Background (CMB) value of 2.725 K for , .

In time-dependent cosmology, there is broad consensus for or equivalentlyHowever, both and must be either cosmic time-invariant or time-dependent according to (4). A general yet simple model that allows for both possibilities is the following:Here, subscript 0 indicates values at the present epoch. The parameters in (14) are not independent as they are constrained by (4). Using (7) in (4), we get so thatSince density is a positive definite quantity, the right hand side of (15) must be <0. Thus, (15) is a basic constraint on time-dependent cosmologies. There is also a dynamical constraint. Substituting (15) into the first equation of (6) gives Invoking for gives Thus, (16) simplifies to

3. Big Bang (Primordial) Nucleosynthesis

Very important observational support for the Big Bang theory derives from Big Bang Nucleosynthesis (BBN), which, in its very early phase, led to the formation of nuclei of light elements in the universe. The standard constant model explains the relative abundance of light elements such as hydrogen, helium, and lithium in the universe nearly perfectly. Any alternative cosmological model proposed must do the same. A very brief summary of BBN is in order here (but see excellent reviews by Steigman [35, 36] and Olive et al. [37]).

Initially, up to ~1 μs, the universe was a quark soup. Then, quarks combined to form ionized plasma of photons, electrons, positrons, neutrinos, protons, and neutrons. Because of the very high prevailing temperatures, protons could combine with electrons to form neutrons. Equilibrium with the relevant nuclear reaction rates meant that the n/p ratio was ~1, where n is the number of neutrons and p is the number of protons. This ratio stayed roughly at unity, until the temperature dropped to about 10 MeV (per particle, ~1011 K). As the temperature fell further to about 0.8 MeV ( K), neutrons could no longer form, since the weak reaction rate that made it possible became slower than the expansion rate of the universe, leading to “freeze-out” of n/p ratio at about 1/6 at ~1 s. Neutrons, no longer being formed, began to decay to protons with a half-life of ~887 seconds, the decay rate being independent of temperature, as long as the temperature does not fall below ~0.1 MeV (~109 K), which occurs at ~115 s in standard cosmology. The n/p ratio began to gradually decrease by this radioactive decay. During roughly the 114 s time delay for the temperature to fall from ~8 × 109 K to ~109 K, the n/p ratio decreased from ~1/6 to ~1/7. Once the temperature fell to 0.1 MeV, neutrons began to be rapidly incorporated [34] into nuclei of 4He with a very high efficiency of 99.99%. The resulting primordial 4He mass fraction is given by For n/p of ~1/7, . Other light elements such as lithium also formed, but when the temperature fell to about 80 keV (~8 × 108 K), nuclear reactions ceased and BBN was over. The relative abundance of light elements in the universe has since remained unaltered. Thus, in a short span of 1 s to ~1,000 s, BBN occurred and lighter elements that we know today formed in the universe.

The observed value of the relative 4He abundance lies in a very narrow range of 0.228 to 0.248 thus constraining the value of n/p to between 1/7.06 and 1/7.77 at the beginning of BBN. This provides a powerful constraint on the expansion rate of the universe, and any cosmological model that does not obey this constraint cannot be valid. It is a race between the very well known rate of nuclear reactions and the expansion rate of the universe. If the change in temperature takes a much longer time than ~114 s, n/p ratio would decrease to unacceptably small values affecting (e.g., for 1-hour time delay, ). In the standard model, scale factor and therefore temperature drop from  K to  K as time increases from ~1 s to ~115 s. A hundredfold change in time brings about a 10-fold change in T and this leads to n/p decrease from ~1/6 to ~1/7 and leads to value of ~0.25. At ~1,000 s, the temperature drops by a further factor of to ~6.6 × 108 and BBN ceases.

During early phases of the Big Bang, radiation dominated the universe, and most of the contribution to density was from radiation and not matter (baryons). The temperature and density of the universe are related by through simple thermodynamics. So, given the density, temperature is determined. During the Big Bang, density of radiation varies as . Therefore, is given bywhere is 2.725, the temperature of the Cosmic Microwave Background (CMB) radiation at present. Therefore, the normalized scale factor must be such that for . Similarly, . These values are independent of the cosmological model used. However, the model must provide an expansion rate that yields a time difference of approximately 115–120 s between the two events, no more, no less.

4. Solutions

We put and so that Equation (18) becomesIt is remarkable that this equation does not contain the gravitational parameter directly. Now, consider the power law behavior of (22) as . LetThen, the left hand side of (22) is . Therefore, so thatFrom (17),The value of is the negative of the value of the deceleration parameter at . This therefore fixes the value of at 0.60, the same as the standard model. The value of must be ~10 for model consistency with BBN (see Table 1). This leaves only the value of as a free parameter. The value of is of course determined by the chosen value of .

The accepted consensus value for is 0.73. However, the model results do not agree well with red shift data (see Figure 1) for this value. The best agreement is obtained for . Table 1 contrasts the values of cosmological parameters for the two models.

Another critical test of a cosmological model is red shift observational data. The distance modulus is given bywhere is the red shift and Here,based on Frieman et al. [34] and Spergel et al. [33]. is too small () to matter as computations indicate but is included anyway. Rewriting (28) in terms of ,with

Figures 1 and 2 summarize the salient results from the proposed variable model. Figure 1(a) shows plotted against up to . Observational data from [3] are superimposed as in Figure  4 of [34]. In Figure 1(b), the residuals in the distance modulus relative to the open universe with and (blue curve) are plotted as in Figure  4 of [34], but with data from [3] superimposed. In Figures 1(a) and 1(b), the x-axis is in log scale to accentuate the current epoch. Figure 2 is the same as Figure 1, except that the x-axis is linear to highlight the region around as in [3]. There are 5 cases displayed in Figures 1 and 2:(1) (green curve): this is the matter-only universe, which will collapse on itself because of the gravitational attraction of the mass of the universe.(2) (blue curve): this is the so-called open universe. It will expand forever.(3) (black curve): this is the current standard constant cosmological model.(4) (magenta curve): this is the proposed variable cosmological model with current values for the parameters.(5) (red curve): this is also the proposed variable cosmological model except for the value of which better fits the observed red shift data.

Note that the observations [3] extend to only. There is a significant overlap between the standard model and the model proposed here from low values of to about , but divergence starts above this value. The residuals make it very clear that both models agree until but then diverge. The model proposed here (red curve) rises slightly above the standard model (black curve) until and then dips down significantly beyond . This behavior provides a testable hypothesis. It provides a crucial test of the proposed time-dependent cosmology when data is collected from future observational campaigns for red shift values beyond . This can be seen in Figure 3, which extends the model results to .

The proposed model is also consistent as to the expansion rate of the universe. Recall the deceleration parameter given bywith the current value of the same as the standard model. From (22), it can be seen that as , and therefore . This is the same limit as in the standard constant model. From (21),so that the current value is simply . With , is . Current estimates vary widely (Table  1 of Ray et al. [8]), with negative values of as much as to positive values of as much as . The value from the proposed model is positive and lies within the range of these estimates. If the present change in with time can be measured more precisely, it would be another test of the variable cosmological model proposed here.

5. Implications of Variable Cosmology

In cosmology, the three important parameters are the Hubble parameter , the cosmological “constant” , and the speed of light (which figures prominently in both cosmology and quantum physics). It is possible to form a salient cosmological nondimensional number out of these three. Using and  km s−1 Mpc−1 ( s−1), the current value is . Interestingly, in the proposed cosmology, in the limit , andso thatand the salient cosmological number remains invariant with cosmological time.

If is representative of dark energy, since is a length scale and is the scale factor, this suggests that obeys an “inverse square law,” somewhat akin to the radiative flux from a star and the gravitational force of a heavenly body.

Whether the physical “constants” such as Newtonian gravitational constant and Planck constant have remained invariant throughout the history of the universe from the beginning of the Big Bang to the present epoch is a very important issue. The only true constant is most likely the speed of light , which underpins relativity and space-time concepts. We also regard the constancy of light speed as inviolable. The same is not necessarily true for the other “constants” we deal with in cosmology and quantum physics. However, Planck scales once again underpin quantum physics and must be regarded as sacrosanct. Consequently, if the variable cosmology presented above is held valid or at least worthy of consideration, then it is essential to elaborate on its implications, since it requires a cosmic time-dependent parameter , which occurs prominently in definition of Planck scales. However, if we postulate that the Planck constant has also been cosmic time-dependent, then the product or the ratio must remain invariant. Recall the various Planck scales, length, time, mass, energy, temperature, and entropy:where is the Boltzmann constant (note that Stefan-Boltzmann constant remains time-invariant). As , also , and if is invariant, Planck scales , , and become singular at . If were to remain invariant, the Planck length and time scales go to zero, but Planck scales , , and need not become singular. The only Planck scales independent of are the Planck-Boltzmann entropy and the speed of light

6. Discussion

It is remarkable that the proposed variable cosmological model depends only on the values of cosmological parameter at present and far into the future and not at all on the gravitational parameter , which underpins much of what happens in the universe. As such, the solutions are not restricted to any phase of the evolution of the universe, such as matter-dominated, radiation-dominated, and inflation phases, and hence are uniformly valid for all time. For the choice made above for these two parameters, the various cosmic times of importance are as follows:Freeze-out: .Start of BBN: .End of BBN: .End of radiation phase: .End of the Dark Age: .

The acceptability of the proposed model depends very much on the acceptable split between matter and dark energy. The current consensus appears to be 27% matter and 73% dark energy. However, we propose 18% and 82%, respectively. As can be seen from Figure 4, this is at the very edge of what may be considered reasonable, according to data available at present.

Reexamining issues such as the formation of stars after the Big Bang may shed more light on the viability of the proposed model. The current ideas assume a time-invariant [38]. What happens if is several orders of magnitude smaller at the end of the Dark Age? How does this affect the initial star formation process? How does a time-dependent affect star formation over cosmic time? These issues are worthy of further exploration. Numerical simulations of initial star formation at much lower values of would be helpful. Can the existing observational data from various sources be shown to be consistent with matter being only 18%? Is the proposed model consistent with observations on star formation? The answers to such questions remain unexplored but are beyond the scope of this study.

Competing Interests

The author declares that there are no competing interests regarding the publication of this paper.

Acknowledgments

The author thanks A. D. Kirwan Jr. for useful discussions.