Relativity, Gravitation and Cosmology (Cheng)

July 2005 Corrections

 

page

location

correction

 

 

 

121

line above Eq(7.19)

Insert sidebar number ‘4’ to read:

            “or equivalently a critical energy density4 of”

and add new sidebar:

  4 In the natural unit system of quantum field theory, this energy per unit volume is approximately  (2.5×10-3eV)4/(ħc)3, where ħ is Planck’s constant (over 2p) with ħc ≈ 2×10-5eV∙cm.

 

 

 

184

subtitle: Possible resolution ...

Change ‘L’ to ‘dark energy’ and add sidebar superscript ‘5’ in title to read:

Possible resolution through a nonvanishing dark energy5  and add the new sidebar:

  5 Dark energy is defined as the “negative equation-of-state energy”, w < 0 in Eq. (8.4). It gives rise to a gravitational repulsion (cf. Sec 9.1.1). The simplest example of a dark energy is Einstein’s cosmological constant, with w = -1. NB: One should not confuse this with the energies of neutrinos, black holes, etc., which are also ‘dark’, but are counted as parts of the “dark matter” (cf. Sec 7.1.4), as the associated pressure is not negative.”

 

 

 

185

sidebar 6 (sidebar 5 before renumbering on p.184)

Change sidebar to read:

6 A Hubble curve (as in Fig 9.7) is a plot of the luminosity distance versus the redshift (measuring recession velocity). A straight Hubble curve means a cosmic expansion that is coasting. This can only happen in an empty universe (cf. Sec 7.1.3 and Fig 8.2). If the expansion is accelerating, the expansion rate H must be smaller in the past. From Eq. (7.5): H∆r = z, we see that, for a given redshift z, the distance ∆r to the light-emitting supernova must be larger than that for an empty or decelerating universe.”

 

 

 

282

2nd line above Eq. (A.21)

Insert ‘is’ before ‘associated’ and replace ‘rX  rc’ by

            ‘, being comparable to the critical density rcc2 [cf. Eq. (7.19)],’ to read:

is associated with the dark energy.  The observed dark energy, being comparable to     the critical density rcc2 [cf. Eq. (7.19)], then corresponds to…”