Was the Big Bang hot?
Abstract
Techniques for verifying the spectrum defined by Woody and Richards (WR, 1981), which serves as a base for dust-distorted models of the 3 K background, are discussed. WR detected a sharp deviation from the Planck curve in the 3 K background. The absolute intensity of the background may be determined by the frequency dependence of the dipole anisotropy of the background or the frequency dependence effect in galactic clusters. Both methods involve the Doppler shift; analytical formulae are defined for characterization of the dipole anisotropy. The measurement of the 30-300 GHz spectra of cold galactic dust may reveal the presence of significant amounts of needle-shaped grains, which would in turn support a theory of a cold Big Bang.
- Publication:
-
Early Evolution of the Universe and its Present Structure
- Pub Date:
- 1983
- Bibcode:
- 1983IAUS..104..113W
- Keywords:
-
- Background Radiation;
- Big Bang Cosmology;
- Cosmic Dust;
- Relic Radiation;
- Brightness Temperature;
- Microwave Spectra;
- Radio Astronomy;
- Temperature Effects;
- Astrophysics