ABSTRACT

The growth of cosmology into a precision science represents one of the most remarkable stories of the past century. Much has been written chronicling this development, but rarely has any of it focused on the most critical element of this work–the cosmic spacetime itself.

Addressing this lacuna is the principal focus of this book, documenting the growing body of evidence compelling us–not only to use this famous solution to Einstein's equations in order to refine the current paradigm, but–to probe its foundation at a much deeper level. Its excursion from the smallest to largest possible scales insightfully reveals an emerging link between the Universe we behold and the established tenets of our most fundamental physical theories.

 Key Features:

  • Uncovers the critical link between the Local Flatness Theorem in general relativity and the symmetries informing the spacetime's metric coefficients
  • Develops a physical explanation for some of the most unpalatable coincidences in cosmology
  • Provides a sober assessment of the horizon problems precluding our full understanding of the early Universe
  • Reveals a possible explanation for the origin of rest-mass energy in Einstein's theory

In spite of its technical layout, this book does not shy away from introducing the principal players who have made the most enduring contributions to this field. Anyone with a graduate level foundation in physics and astronomy will be able to easily follow its contents.

part I|84 pages

Space and Time

chapter Chapter 1|13 pages

Introduction

chapter Chapter 2|35 pages

Theoretical Background

chapter Chapter 3|13 pages

The Black-hole Spacetime

chapter Chapter 4|18 pages

The Cosmic Spacetime

part II|106 pages

The Metric

chapter Chapter 5|11 pages

Special FLRW Solutions

chapter Chapter 6|53 pages

The Standard Model

chapter Chapter 7|23 pages

The Gravitational Horizon

chapter Chapter 8|14 pages

Cosmological Redshift

part III|167 pages

Horizons

chapter Chapter 9|20 pages

Emergence of Zero Active Mass

chapter Chapter 9|11 pages

Theoretical Basis for Zero Active Mass

chapter Chapter 11|25 pages

The Horizon Problems

chapter Chapter 12|51 pages

Observing Zero Active Mass

chapter Chapter 13|34 pages

Structure Formation

chapter Chapter 14|21 pages

Future Prospects