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Plasma cosmology

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M87's Energetic Jet. The glow is caused by the synchrotron radiation that results from high energy electrons spiraling along magnetic field lines. Whilst the mainstream view is that M87's dynamics are affected by a supermassive black hole, some plasma cosmologists suggest that the radiation may be due instead to Birkeland currents.

Plasma cosmology is a non-standard cosmological model based on the electromagnetic properties of astrophysical plasmas. The stars and essentially all of the space between them is filled with plasma. Plasma cosmology attempts to explain the large scale structure of the universe, from galaxy formation to the cosmic microwave background in terms of this ubiquitous phase of matter. The theory was first proposed and initially developed by plasma physicist Hannes Alfvén as an alternative to the two leading candidates in physical cosmology, the Big Bang model and the Steady State model. In 1937, he argued that if plasma pervaded the universe, then it could generate a galactic magnetic field and overwhelm the dynamics of the universe. While such a magnetic field has been discovered, the cosmological implications of these magnetic fields are considered negligible by the majority of astrophysicists in the field. Many years afterward, space was still thought to be a vacuum. Later Alfvén had also theorised the existence of anti-plasma or ambiplasma as a supplementary development, but the idea never came into favour.

While plasma cosmology never had the support of as large a number of astronomers and physicists, there was some renewed interest in the idea during the 1990s when survey measurements of the cosmic microwave background failed to show anisotropies in the blackbody spectrum. After the discovery of such anisotropies by the BOOMERanG and COBE experiments, the brief interest in the scientific community all but evaporated. A small number of plasma physicists such as Anthony Peratt and Eric Lerner continue to develop the models.

The properties of astrophysical plasmas are well modelled by the science of magnetohydrodynamics (MHD), the developement of which won Alfvén the Nobel Prize in 1970. MHD generally treats a plasma as an a perfectly conducting ideal fluid with little or no resistivity, and which Alfvén called a "magnetic field description". But based on his experimental work, Alfvén's also applied an "electric current description" to plasmas, whose properties are less well-known, such as Birkeland currents (field-align currents), double layers (charge separation regions), certain classes of plasma instabilities, and chemical separation in space plasmas. An extended version of MHD encompassing an electric field description and some of these more complex phenomena is called Hall-magnetohydrodynamics (Hall-MHD or HMHD).

Overview of astrophysical plasmas

File:Hannes-alfven-stamp.jpg
Hannes Alfvén (1908-1995), made significant advances in the study of plasmas and their application to physics and astronomy

Astrophysical plasmas are characterized as contain being neutral over the largest scales. That is they contain equal numbers of electrons (negative ions) to positive ions (eg. mainly hydrogen ions, or protons, H+). Plasma are also highly conductive, so that even if charges become unbalanced, electrons can move quickly to neutralise the charge. Movement of electrons is characterized by electric current.

Electromagnetic forces in plasmas

The electromagnetic force between two charged particles, is many times – 10 times for two electrons -- greater than the force of gravity between them. As the long-accepted functional definition of plasmas is that they are neutral on large scales, the electric forces in them have limited range, just as the gravitational force is the only long range force we experience on Earth.

The local range of electric fields in a plasma is defined by the Debye Length, and is typically about 1 cm in the ionosphere, 10m in the Solar Wind, and 10km in the intergalactic medium.

Alfvén's model

File:Tycho-supernova.jpg
A cellular body: Tycho's Supernova Remnant, a huge ball of exploding plasma. Langmuir coined the name plasma because of its similarity to blood plasma, and Hannes Alfvén noted its cellular nature. Note also the filamentary blue outer shell of X-ray emitting high-speed electrons

Nobel laureate Hannes Alfvén's model of plasma cosmology can be divided into two distinct areas. (1) Cosmic Plasma, his empirical description of the Universe based on the results from laboratory experiments on plasmas (2) ambiplasma theory, based on a hypothetical matter/antimatter plasma.

Alfvén's Cosmic Plasma

Building on the work of Kristian Birkeland, Alfvén's research on plasma led him to develop the field of magnetohydrodynamics (MHD), a field of work that mathematically models plasma as fluid, and for which he won the Nobel Prize for Physics in 1970. MHD is readily accepted and used by astrophysicists and astronomers to describe many celestial phenomena.

But Alfvén felt that many other characteristics of plasmas played a more significant role in cosmic plasmas. These include:

  • Scaleability of plasma where the properties laboratory plasmas can be applied to cosmic plasmas
  • Birkeland currents (electric currents) that form electric circuits in space, stored energy and transport energy from one region to another (see diagram below)
  • Plasma double layers, charge separation regions that also accelerate ions to relativistic velocities and produce synchrotron radiation
  • Instabilities such as the Bennett pinch (Z-pinch) that produces plasma cables (magnetic ropes)
  • The cellular structure of plasma, whereby a plasma of a certain set of properties tends to form a spherical or tear-drop shaped region in space, such as the heliosphere, or Earth's plasmasphere.
File:Cosmic-plasma circuits.gif
Hannes Alfvén considered a cosmic plasma to be part of a circuit, in the same way a laboratory plasma tube is part of a circuit. A battery with an emf Vb transmits a current around a circuit with a resistance Ro and inductance L. The voltage between the electrodes of the plasma depends on the current I, and various plasma parameters such as density, magnetic field, temperatures, etc. A plasma double layer behaves in a similar fashion.

Depending on the total resistance of the circuit, R + Ro (R can be negative), the plasma may be in equilibrium, or oscilate at a frequency that depends on the inductance L. So even if the plasma's parameters are known, the behaviour of the plasma depends on the outer circuit.

Every electric circuit is potentially explosive. If the plasma circuit is disrupted in the plasma double layer, the inductive energy in the whole circuit will be released in the plasma, and is equivalent to ½LI.

Current features and problems for plasma cosmology

Current suporters of plasma cosmology have claimed that the large scale structure of the universe at least superficially appears similar to the structures seen in laboratory plasmas. Since this is only one of the areas of interest to physical cosmology, however, plasma cosmologists have also offered explanations for other features: namely the cosmic microwave background, the redshift distance relationship, and primordial helium abundance.

Microwave background

Even though mainstream interest in plasma cosmology rapidly waned as precise measurements of the cosmic microwave background (CMB), such as those by COBE, both Anthony Peratt and Eric J. Lerner have proposed that plasma cosmology could explain the CMB. In particular, Lerner has shown that plasma cosmology can generate a background by synchrotron radiation. This model fails to predict the CMB anisotropy peaks in the power spectrum or the precise black-body nature of the spectrum. In particular, it fails to predict the 1 degree mode on the sky or the strength of this feature.

Redshifts

Cosmological redshifts are a ubiqitous phenomenon seen that is summarized by the Hubble Law where more distant galaxies have greater redshifts. Advocates of plasma cosmology dispute the claim that this observation indicates an expanding universe and even dispute the more prosaic explanation (used by, for example, the Steady State theory) that they are an indication of recessional velocities. Instead, alternative mechanisms for redshifts are desired.

Although there are many local photon frequency shifting mechanisms observed in laboratory experimentation with plasmas, one problem in using a majority of them to explain cosmological redshifts is that it is difficult to account for a change in the energy of a photon going through plasma without photon scattering (changing the photon's direction of propagation.) In some non-linear optical phenomena, it is argued there may be forms of scattering in which the direction of propagation of the photons is not changed. Specifically, one favorite phenomenon for plasma cosmology advocates is Forward Brillouin Scattering, found locally in laser fusion devices, as an example. This form of forward scattering causes a frequency shift over a range of photon energies and a broadening of spectral lines without changing the direction of propagation of the incident light. However, it does not explain the redshifting of high energy or low energy photons as the conventional explanations do.

Primordial helium abundance

While the Big Bang explains the primordial helium abundance as being due to Big Bang nucleosynthesis, plasma cosmology proponents do not directly explain the ratio of elemental constitutents of the universe. Rather since there is no mechanism for creation of atoms in plasma cosmology, the abundance of light elements is taken to be an initial condition.

Dark matter, dark energy

Advocates of plasma cosmology claim that the observations that are typically seen as evidence for dark matter and dark energy in mainstream cosmology can be explained by plasma processes affecting the dynamics and the redshifts that are associated with these features. It is not clear, however, that evidence from gravitational lensing or from the matter power spectrum or the cosmic microwave background for these features can be explained by plasma processes alone.

Future

Plasma cosmology is not an established scientific theory, and even most advocates agree the explanations provided are much less complete than those of conventional cosmology. Within plasma cosmology, there have been no published papers which make predictions on the primordial helium abundance or which calculate correlation functions.

Figures in plasma cosmology

The following physicists and astronomers helped, either directly or indirectly, to develop this field:

  • Hannes Alfvén - Along with Birkeland, fathered Plasma Cosmology and was a pioneer in laboratory based plasma physics. Received the only Nobel Prize ever awarded to a plasma physicist.
  • Halton Arp - Astronomer famous for his work on anomalous redshifts, "Quasars, Redshifts and Controversies".
  • Kristian Birkeland - First suggested that polar electric currents are connected to a system of filaments (now called "Birkeland Currents") that flowed along geomagnetic field lines into and away from the polar region. Suggested that space is not a vacuum but is instead filled with plasma. Pioneered the technique of "laboratory astrophysics", which became directly responsible for our present understanding of the aurora.
  • Eric Lerner - Claims that the intergalactic medium is a strong absorber of the cosmic microwave background radiation with the absorption occurring in narrow filaments. Postulates that quasars are not related to black holes but are rather produced by a magnetic self-compression process similar to that occurring in the plasma focus.
  • Anthony Peratt - Developed computer simulations of galaxy formation using Birkeland currents along with gravity. Along with Alfven, organized international conferences on Plasma Cosmology.
  • Nikola Tesla - Developed the rotating magnetic field model.
  • Gerrit L. Verschuur - Radio astronomer, writer of "Interstellar matters : essays on curiosity and astronomical discovery" and "Cosmic catastrophes".

See also

Links and resources

Publications

  • IEEE Xplore, IEEE Transactions on Plasma Science, 18 issue 1 (1990), Special Issue on Plasma Cosmology.
  • G. Arcidiacono, "Plasma physics and big-bang cosmology", Hadronic Journal 18, 306-318 (1995).
  • J. E. Brandenburg, "A model cosmology based on gravity-electromagnetism unification", Astrophysics and Space Science 227, 133-144 (1995).
  • J. Kanipe, "The pillars of cosmology: a short history and assessment". Astrophysics and Space Science 227, 109-118 (1995).
  • O. Klein, "Arguments concerning relativity and cosmology," Science 171 (1971), 339.
  • W. C. Kolb, "How can spirals persist?," Astrophysics and Space Science 227, 175-186 (1995).
  • E. J. Lerner, "Intergalactic radio absorption and the Cobe data", Astrophys. Space Sci. 227, 61-81 (1995)
  • E. J. Lerner, "On the problem of Big-bang nucleosynthesis", Astrophys. Space Sci. 227, 145-149 (1995).
  • B. E. Meierovich, "Limiting current in general relativity" Gravitation and Cosmology 3, 29-37 (1997).
  • A. L. Peratt, "Plasma and the universe: Large-scale dynamics, filamentation, and radiation", Astrophys. Space Sci. 227, 97-107 (1995).
  • A. L. Peratt, "Plasma cosmology", IEEE T. Plasma Sci. 18, 1-4 (1990).
  • C. M. Snell and A. L. Peratt, "Rotation velocity and neutral hydrogen distribution dependency on magnetic-field strength in spiral galaxies", Astrophys. Space Sci. 227, 167-173 (1995).

Related Books

  • H. Alfvén, Worlds-antiworlds: antimatter in cosmology, (Freeman, 1966).
  • H. Alfvén, Cosmic Plasma (Reidel, 1981) ISBN 9027711518
  • E. J. Lerner, The Big Bang Never Happened, (Vintage, 1992) ISBN 067974049X
  • A. L. Peratt, Physics of the Plasma Universe, (Springer, 1992) ISBN 0387975756
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