4.4 Article

Undermining the cosmological principle: almost isotropic observations in inhomogeneous cosmologies

Journal

CLASSICAL AND QUANTUM GRAVITY
Volume 17, Issue 24, Pages 5047-5078

Publisher

IOP PUBLISHING LTD
DOI: 10.1088/0264-9381/17/24/308

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We challenge the widely held belief that the cosmological principle is an obvious consequence of the observed isotropy of the cosmic microwave background radiation (CMB), combined with the Copernican principle. We perform a detailed analysis of a class of inhomogeneous perfect fluid cosmologies admitting an isotropic radiation field, with a view to assessing their viability as models of the real universe. These spacetimes are distinguished from FLRW universes by the presence of inhomogeneous pressure, which results in an acceleration of the fluid (fundamental observers). We examine their physical, geometrical and observational characteristics for all observer positions in the spacetimes. To this end, we derive exact, analytic expressions for the distance-redshift relations and anisotropies for any observer, and compare their predictions with available observational constraints. As far as the authors are aware, this work represents the first exact analysis of the observational properties of an inhomogeneous cosmological model for all observer positions. Considerable attention is devoted to the anisotropy in the CMB. The difficulty of defining the surface of last scattering in exact, inhomogenous cosmological models is discussed; several alternative practical definitions are presented, and one of these is used to estimate the CMB anisotropy for any model. The isotropy constraints derived from 'local' observations (redshift less than or similar to 1) are also considered, qualitatively. A crucial aspect of this work is the application of the Copernican principle: for a specific model to be acceptable we demand that it must be consistent with current observational constraints (especially anisotropy constraints) for all observer locations. The most important results of the paper are presented as exclusion plots in the two-dimensional parameter space of the models. We show that there is a region of parameter space not ruled out by the constraints we consider and containing models that are significantly inhomogeneous. It follows immediately from this that the cosmological principle cannot be assumed to hold on the basis of present observational constraints.

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