Redshifts For photons, expansion leads to the
cosmological redshift. While the cosmological redshift is often explained as the stretching of photon wavelengths due to "expansion of space", it is more naturally viewed as a consequence of the
Doppler effect.
Peculiar velocities An object's
peculiar velocity is its velocity with respect to the comoving coordinate grid, i.e., with respect to the average expansion-associated motion of the surrounding material. It is a measure of how a particle's motion deviates from the
Hubble flow of the expanding universe. The peculiar velocities of nonrelativistic particles decay as the universe expands, in inverse proportion with the cosmic
scale factor. This can be understood as a self-sorting effect. A particle that is moving in some direction gradually overtakes the Hubble flow of cosmic expansion in that direction, asymptotically approaching material with the same velocity as its own. More generally, the peculiar
momenta of both relativistic and nonrelativistic particles decay in inverse proportion with the scale factor.
Temperature The universe cools as it expands. This follows from the decay of particles' peculiar momenta, as discussed above. It can also be understood as
adiabatic cooling. The temperature of
ultrarelativistic fluids, often called "radiation" and including the
cosmic microwave background, scales inversely with the scale factor (i.e. T\propto a^{-1}). The temperature of nonrelativistic matter drops more sharply, scaling as the inverse square of the scale factor (i.e. T\propto a^{-2}).
Density The contents of the universe dilute as it expands. The number of particles within a comoving volume remains fixed (on average), while the volume expands. For nonrelativistic matter, this implies that the energy density drops as \rho\propto a^{-3}, where a is the
scale factor. For ultrarelativistic particles ("radiation"), the energy density drops more sharply, as \rho\propto a^{-4}. This is because the energy of an ultrarelativistic particle is dominated by its momentum, rather than its
rest mass energy (see
energy-momentum relation). Consequently, in addition to the volume dilution of the particle count, the energy of each particle also drops in proportion with a^{-1} as its peculiar momentum decays. In general, we can consider a
perfect fluid with pressure p=w\rho, where \rho is the energy density. The parameter w is the
equation of state parameter. The energy density of such a fluid drops as : \rho\propto a^{-3(1+w)}. Nonrelativistic matter has w=0 while radiation has w=1/3. For an exotic fluid with negative pressure, like dark energy, the energy density drops more slowly; if w=-1 it remains constant in time. If w, corresponding to
phantom energy, the energy density grows as the universe expands. == Expansion history ==