The definition of homogeneous strongly depends on the context used. For example, a
composite material is made up of different individual materials, known as "
constituents" of the material, but may be defined as a homogeneous material when assigned a function. For example,
asphalt paves our roads, but is a composite material consisting of asphalt binder and mineral aggregate, and then laid down in layers and compacted. However, homogeneity of materials does not necessarily mean
isotropy. In the previous example, a composite material may not be isotropic. In another context, a material is not homogeneous in so far as it is composed of
atoms and
molecules. However, at the normal level of our everyday world, a pane of glass, or a sheet of metal is described as glass, or stainless steel. In other words, these are each described as a homogeneous material. A few other instances of context are:
homogeneity (in space) implies
conservation of momentum; and
homogeneity in time implies
conservation of energy.
Homogeneous alloy In the context of composite metals is an alloy. A blend of a metal with one or more metallic or nonmetallic materials is an alloy. The components of an alloy do not combine chemically but, rather, are very finely mixed. An alloy might be homogeneous or might contain small particles of components that can be viewed with a microscope. Brass is an example of an alloy, being a homogeneous mixture of copper and zinc. Another example is steel, which is an alloy of iron with carbon and possibly other metals. The purpose of alloying is to produce desired properties in a metal that naturally lacks them. Brass, for example, is harder than copper and has a more gold-like color. Steel is harder than iron and can even be made rust proof (stainless steel).
Homogeneous cosmology Homogeneity, in another context plays a role in
cosmology. From the perspective of 19th-century cosmology (and before), the
universe was
infinite, unchanging, homogeneous, and therefore filled with
stars. However, German astronomer
Heinrich Olbers asserted that if this were true, then the entire night sky would be filled with light and bright as day; this is known as
Olbers' paradox. Olbers presented a technical paper in 1826 that attempted to answer this conundrum. The faulty premise, unknown in Olbers' time, was that the universe is not infinite, static, and homogeneous. The
Big Bang cosmology replaced this model (expanding, finite, and
inhomogeneous universe). However, modern astronomers supply reasonable explanations to answer this question. One of at least several explanations is that distant stars and
galaxies are
red shifted, which weakens their apparent light and makes the night sky dark. However, the weakening is not sufficient to actually explain Olbers' paradox. Many cosmologists think that the fact that the Universe is finite in time, that is that the Universe has not been around forever, is the solution to the paradox. The fact that the night sky is dark is thus an indication for the Big Bang. == Translation invariance ==