- Timeline of cosmic microwave background astronomy
Timeline ofcosmic microwave background astronomy Thermal (non-microwave background) temperature predictions
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1896 -Charles Edouard Guillaume estimates the "radiation of the stars" to be 5.6K. [Guillaume, C.-E., 1896, "La Nature" 24, series 2, p. 234, cited in [http://redshift.vif.com/JournalFiles/Pre2001/V02NO3PDF/V02N3ASS.PDF "History of the 2.7 K Temperature Prior to Penzias and Wilson" (PDF)] ]
*1926 - SirArthur Eddington estimates the non-thermal radiation ofstarlight in the galaxy ".. by the formula E = σT4 the effective temperature corresponding to this density is 3.18º absolute .. black body" [Eddington, A., [http://adsabs.harvard.edu/cgi-bin/nph-bib_query?bibcode=1927Sci....66...81E&db_key=AST&data_type=HTML&format=&high=42ca922c9c22437 The Internal Constitution of the Stars] , cited in [http://redshift.vif.com/JournalFiles/Pre2001/V02NO3PDF/V02N3ASS.PDF "History of the 2.7 K Temperature Prior to Penzias and Wilson" (PDF)] ]
*1930s -Cosmologist Erich Regener calculates that the non-thermal spectrum of cosmic rays in the galaxy has an effective temperature of 2.8K
*1931 - Term "microwave" first used in print: "When trials with wavelengths as low as 18 cm. were made known, there was undisguised surprise+that the problem of the micro-wave had been solved so soon." Telegraph & Telephone Journal XVII. 179/1
*1934 -Richard Tolman shows thatblack-body radiation in an expanding universe cools but remains thermal
*1938 - Nobel Prize winner (1920)Walther Nernst reestimates the cosmic ray temperature as 0.75K
*1941 -Andrew McKellar uses the excitation of CN doublet lines to measure that the "effective temperature of space" is about 2.3 K*
1946 -Robert Dicke predicts ".. radiation from cosmic matter" at <20 K, but did not refer to background radiation Helge Kragh, Cosmology and Controversy: [http://books.google.com/books?id=f6p0AFgzeMsC&vid=ISBN069100546X&pg=PA135&lpg=PA135&sig=h6snxSfYc8zr3aoxiu-WbOJgpvk&q=cosmic+microwave The Historical Development of Two Theories of the Universe] (1999) ISBN 0-691-00546-X. "In 1946 Robert Dicke and coworkers at MIT tested equipment that could test a cosmic microwave background of intensity corresponding to about 20K in the microwave region. However, they did not refer to such a background, but only to 'radiation from cosmic matter'. Also this work was unreleated to cosmology, and is only mentioned because it suggests that by 1950 detection of the background radiation might have been technically possible, and also because of Dicke's later role in the discovery". See also Robert H. Dicke, Robert Beringer, Robert L. Kyhl, and A. B. Vane, " [http://prola.aps.org/abstract/PR/v70/i5-6/p340_1 Atmospheric Absorption Measurements with a Microwave Radiometer] " (1946) "Phys. Rev". 70, 340–348]
*1946 -George Gamow calculates a temperature of 50 K (assuming a 3-billion year old Universe) [George Gamow, " [http://books.google.com/books?id=5awirwgmvAoC&pg=PA40&lpg=PA40&vq=50&dq=%22creation+of+the+universe%22+gamow&sig=cnNpSmeBqcMg7dnA4ImfKjiLNE0 The Creation Of The Universe] " p.50 (Dover reprint of revised 1961 edition) ISBN 0-486-43868-6] , commenting it ".. is in reasonable agreement with the actual temperature of interstellar space", but does not mention background radiation.
*1953 -Erwin Finlay-Freundlich in support of histired light theory, derives a blackbody temperature for intergalactic space of 2.3K [Erwin Finlay-Freundlich, " [http://adsabs.harvard.edu/abs/1953CoStA...4...96F Ueber die Rotverschiebung der Spektrallinien] " (1953) "Contributions from the Observatory, University of St. Andrews" ; no. 4, p. 96-102. Finlay-Freundlich also gave two extreme values of 1.9K and 6.0K in Finlay-Freundlich, E.: 1954, "Red shifts in the spectra of celestial bodies", Phil. Mag., Vol. 45, pp. 303-319.] with comment fromMax Born suggesting radio astronomy as the arbitrator between expanding and infinite cosmologies.Microwave background radiation predictions
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1946 -George Gamow calculates a temperature of 50 K (assuming a 3-billion year old Universe) [George Gamow, " [http://books.google.com/books?id=5awirwgmvAoC&pg=PA40&lpg=PA40&vq=50&dq=%22creation+of+the+universe%22+gamow&sig=cnNpSmeBqcMg7dnA4ImfKjiLNE0 The Creation Of The Universe] " p.50 (Dover reprint of revised 1961 edition) ISBN 0-486-43868-6] , commenting it ".. is in reasonable agreement with the actual temperature of interstellar space", but does not mention background radiation.
*1948 -Ralph Alpher andRobert Herman estimate "the temperature in the Universe" at 5 K. Although they do not specifically mention microwave background radiation, it may be inferred. [Helge Kragh, Cosmology and Controversy: [http://books.google.com/books?vid=ISBN069100546X&id=f6p0AFgzeMsC&pg=PA132&lpg=PA132&vq=cosmic+microwave&sig=YvmlZ13jwKPS0ucC5ogFsPqwfnY The Historical Development of Two Theories of the Universe] (1999) ISBN 0-691-00546-X. "Alpher and Herman first calculated the present temperature of the decoupled primordial radiation in 1948, when they reported a value of 5 K. Although it was not mentioned either then or in later publications that the radiation is in the microwave region, this follows immediately from the temperature .. Alpher and Herman made it clear that what they had called "the temperature in the univerese" the previous year referred to a blackbody distributed background radiation quite different from sunliight".]
*1949 - Ralph Alpher and Robert Herman re-re-estimate the temperature at 28 K.
*1957 - Tigran Shmaonov reports that "the absolute effective temperature of the radioeission background ... is 4+/- 3K" [Tigran Shmaonov, "Pribory i Teknika Eksperienta" (1957)] . It is noted that the "measurements showed that radiation intensity was independent of either time or direction of observation .. it is now clear that Shmaonov did observe the cosmic microwave background at a wavelength of 3.2cm" [Dmitri I. Novikov, The Physics of the Cosmic Microwave Background, 2006, Cambridge University Press, 272 pages, ISBN 0521855500. ( [http://books.google.com/books?hl=en&lr=&id=J2KCisZsWZ0C&oi=fnd&pg=RA1-PA1&dq=Shmaonov+cmb&ots=JBjbEu7tNl&sig=JgZNDEsD8ULPUv4WI8my3IZED1U#PRA1-PA5,M1 page 5] )]
*1960 s -Robert Dicke re-estimates a microwave background radiation temperature of 40K (ref: Helge Kragh)
*1964 -A. G. Doroshkevich andIgor Dmitrievich Novikov write an unnoticed paper suggesting microwave searches for the black-body radiation predicted by Gamow, Alpher, and Herman. [A. G. Doroshkevich and I. D. Novikov, " [http://adsabs.harvard.edu/abs/1964SPhD....9..111D Mean Density of Radiation in the Metagalaxy and Certain Problems in Relativistic Cosmology] " "Sov. Phys. Doklady" 9, 111 (1964).]
*1965 -Arno Penzias , Robert Wilson,Bernie Burke ,Robert Dicke , and James Peebles discover the cosmic microwave background radiation, eventually confirmed at approximately 2.7K
*1966 -Rainer Sachs andArthur Michael Wolfe theoretically predict microwave background fluctuation amplitudes created bygravitational potential variations between observers and the last scattering surface (seeSachs-Wolfe effect )
*1968 -Martin Rees andDennis Sciama theoretically predict microwave background fluctuation amplitudes created by photons traversing time-dependent potential wells
*1969 -R. A. Sunyaev andYakov Zel'dovich study the inverseCompton scattering of microwave background photons by hot electrons (seeSunyaev-Zel'dovich effect )
*1983 - Researchers from the Cambridge Radio Astronomy Group and theOwens Valley Radio Observatory first detect theSunyaev-Zel'dovich effect from clusters of galaxies
*1990 - TheCosmic Background Explorer (COBE ) satellite shows that the microwave background has a nearly perfect black-body spectrum and thereby strongly constrains the density of theintergalactic medium .
* January1992 - scientists that analysed data from theRELIKT-1 report the discovery ofanisotropy in the cosmic microwave background at the Moscow astrophysical seminar. ["Nobel Prize In Physics: Russia's Missed Opportunities] ",RIA Novosti , Nov 21, 2006]
*1992 - scientists that analysed data fromCOBE report the discovery ofanisotropy in the cosmic microwave background.
*1995 - TheCosmic Anisotropy Telescope performs the first high resolution observations of the cosmic microwave background.
*1999 - TheBOOMERanG experiment makes higher quality maps at intermediate resolution, and confirms that the Universe is "flat".
*2003 - The CBI and theVery Small Array produces yet higher quality maps at high resolution (covering small areas of the sky).
*2003 - TheWMAP satellite produces an even higher quality map at low and intermediate resolution of the whole sky (WMAP provides "no" high-resolution data, but improves on the intermediate resolution maps from BOOMERanG).
*2004 - E-mode polarization spectrum obtained by the CBI. [A. Readhead et al., "Polarization observations with the Cosmic Background Imager", Science 306, 836-844 (2004).]
*2004 - TheArcminute Cosmology Bolometer Array Receiver produces a higher quality map of the high resolution structure not mapped by WMAP.
*2005 - TheArcminute Microkelvin Imager and theSunyaev-Zel'dovich Array begin the first surveys for very high redshift clusters of galaxies using theSunyaev-Zel'dovich effect .Future
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2008 The Clover Project will give an improved precision intermediate and high resolution map, and measure the B-mode polarization
*2009 ThePlanck (satellite) will give improved precision at all resolutionsNotes
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