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单词 cosmological constant
释义

cosmological constant


cosmological constant

n. A constant introduced into the general theory of relativity, proportional to the energy density of the vacuum, and related to the rate of expansion or contraction of the universe. The vacuum energy represented by the cosmological constant is a form of dark energy.
Thesaurus
Noun1.cosmological constant - an arbitrary constant in the equations of general relativity theoryconstant - a number representing a quantity assumed to have a fixed value in a specified mathematical context; "the velocity of light is a constant"
Translations
costante cosmologica

cosmological constant


Cosmological models with different deceleration parametersCosmological models with different deceleration parameters

cosmological constant

(koz-mŏ-loj -ă-kăl) A constant term that can be added to Einstein's field equations of general relativity theory. The cosmological constant was originally put forward by Albert Einstein in 1917 to ensure that the application of general relativity theory to the Universe results in a static Universe rather than an expanding or contracting Universe. The discovery that the Universe is expanding removed the necessity for introducing the cosmological constant but cosmological models with a nonzero cosmological constant have been considered by theoreticians.

For many years it was thought that the value of the cosmological constant is exactly zero but, starting in the late 1990s, evidence began to accumulate that the cosmological constant has a small but nonzero value. This has the consequence that the expansion of the Universe is accelerating. There have been many attempts to show why the value of the cosmological constant is either zero or very small but there is no consensus as to why this should be the case.

Cosmological Constant

 

the constant A introduced by A. Einstein in 1917 into his equations of gravitation (1916) so that these equations would have solutions describing a static universe and would satisfy the requirement of the relativity of inertia. The physical meaning of the introduction of the constant consists in the assumed existence of special cosmic forces (of repulsion at ∧ > 0 and of attraction at ∧ < 0) that increase with distance. Since the requirement of a static universe became redundant with the discovery that galaxies are receding from one another, Einstein abandoned the cosmological constant in 1931. From this time on, it was assumed that ∧ ≡ 0. Another possibility is being considered at present (the 1970’s), namely, that the cosmological constant is extremely small (∽10−55 cm−2).

REFERENCE

Zel’dovich, la. B., and I. D. Novikov. Reliativistskaia astrofizika. Moscow, 1967.

G. I. NAAN

cosmological constant

[¦käz·mə¦läj·ə·kəl ′kän·stənt] (relativity) The multiplicative constant for a term proportional to the metric in Einstein's equation relating the curvature of space to the energy-momentum tensor.

cosmological constant


  • noun

Words related to cosmological constant

noun an arbitrary constant in the equations of general relativity theory

Related Words

  • constant
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