Radiation-dominated era After
Inflation, and until about 47,000 years
after the Big Bang, the dynamics of the
early universe were set by
radiation (referring generally to the constituents of the universe which moved
relativistically, principally
photons and
neutrinos). For a radiation-dominated universe the evolution of the scale factor in the
Friedmann–Lemaître–Robertson–Walker metric is obtained solving the
Friedmann equations: a(t) \propto t^{1/2}.
Matter-dominated era Between about 47,000 years and 9.8 billion years
after the Big Bang, the
energy density of matter exceeded both the energy density of radiation and the vacuum energy density. When the
early universe was about 47,000 years old (redshift 3600),
mass–energy density surpassed the
radiation energy, although the universe remained
optically thick to radiation until the universe was about 378,000 years old (redshift 1100). This second moment in time (close to the time of
recombination), at which the photons which compose the
cosmic microwave background radiation were last scattered, is often mistaken as marking the end of the radiation era. For a matter-dominated universe the evolution of the scale factor in the
Friedmann–Lemaître–Robertson–Walker metric is easily obtained solving the
Friedmann equations: a(t) \propto t^{2/3}
Dark-energy–dominated era In
physical cosmology, the
dark-energy–dominated era is proposed as the last of the three phases of the known universe, beginning when the Universe was about 9.8 billion years old. In the era of
cosmic inflation, the Hubble parameter is also thought to be constant, so the expansion law of the dark-energy–dominated era also holds for the inflationary prequel of the big bang. The
cosmological constant is given the symbol Λ, and, considered as a source term in the
Einstein field equation, can be viewed as equivalent to a "mass" of empty space, or
dark energy. Since this increases with the volume of the universe, the expansion pressure is effectively constant, independent of the scale of the universe, while the other terms decrease with time. Thus, as the density of other forms of matter – dust and radiation – drops to very low concentrations, the cosmological constant (or "dark energy") term will eventually dominate the energy density of the Universe. Recent measurements of the change in Hubble constant with time, based on observations of distant
supernovae, show this acceleration in expansion rate, indicating the presence of such dark energy. For a dark-energy–dominated universe, the evolution of the scale factor in the
Friedmann–Lemaître–Robertson–Walker metric is easily obtained solving the
Friedmann equations: a(t) \propto \exp(H_0t) Here, the coefficient H_0in the exponential, the
Hubble constant, is H_0 = \sqrt{8\pi G \rho_\mathrm{full} / 3} = \sqrt{\Lambda / 3}. This exponential dependence on time makes the spacetime geometry identical to the
de Sitter universe, and only holds for a positive sign of the cosmological constant, which is the case according to the currently accepted value of the
cosmological constant, Λ, that is approximately . The current density of the
observable universe is of the order of and the age of the universe is of the order of 13.8 billion years, or . The Hubble constant, H_0, is ≈ (The Hubble time is 13.79 billion years). ==See also==