HPS 2580      Cosmology      Spring 2018

  Orphaned topics   that I couldn't fit into the schedule, alas.

Back to course documents.

Week Date Topic/Reading Event Presented by


Antiquity
1
Einstein's 1917 Cosmology Paper
Albert Einstein, "Cosmological Considerations on the General Theory of Relativity" 1917



Warm up: Albert Einstein, "The Foundation of the General Theory of Relativity,"  Sections 1-2 only.



(1917 paper) Introduction and Sect. 1 "The Newtonian Theory"



Sect. 2 "The Boundary Conditions According to the General Theory of Relativity."



Sect. 3 "The Spatially Finite Universe with a Uniform Matter Distribution"



Sect. 4 "On an Additional Term for the Field Equations of Gravitation"



Sect. 5 "Calculation and Result"





2
De Sitter responds

de Sitter, W. "On the relativity of inertia. Remarks concerning Einstein's latest hypothesis," in: KNAW, Proceedings, 19 II, 1917, Amsterdam, 1917, pp. 1217-1225.

Background:
De Sitter Spacetime and Space in de Sitter Spacetime in "Big Bang Cosmology" in John D. Norton, Einstein for Everyone
Erwin Schroedinger, Expanding Universes. Cambridge U. P., 1956. Ch. 1, see pp. 1-3.



Paradox of Newtonian cosmology

John D. Norton, "The Cosmological Woes of Newtonian Gravitation Theory," in H. Goenner, J. Renn, J. Ritter and T. Sauer, eds., The Expanding Worlds of General Relativity: Einstein Studies, volume 7, Boston: Birkhäuser, pp. 271-322.

John D. Norton, "The Force of Newtonian Cosmology: Acceleration is Relative" Philosophy of Science, 62, pp.511-22.





3
Lemaitre and the first expanding universes




4
Milne's axiomatic cosmology






Middle Ages
5
Steady state cosmology




7
Penzias and Wilson, Cosmic background radiation
Big bang cosmology ascends

p. 75 in Andrew Liddle, An Introduction to Modern Cosmology. Wiley.