In article <
mt2.0-13764...@hydra.herts.ac.uk>, Nicolaas Vroom
<
nicolaa...@pandora.be> writes:
> > > I agree that the 3 examples are complex physical systems and maybe are
> > > not understood at fundamental level but that does not mean that this is
> > > not true for the CMBR.
> >
> > The statement, which I agee with, is that the physics of the CMB is
> > better understood than that of, say, supernovae.
>
> SN Data does not require Power Spectrum nor the program CAMB
True, but that does not mean that they are understood. CAMB is just one
code (though a good one). The basic physics is well understood. Not
everything is known about supernovae.
> The issue is the colums 2 and 3 of table 2 (Planck results 16) page 11.
> What these columns show are 6 + 20 parameters which apparently can
> be calculated ONLY by using Planck data.
> Those parameters include H0 and the Age of the Universe.
One can of course calculate H0 and the age of the universe (which needs
three parameters, e.g. H0, lambda0 and Omega0) without the CMB.
> By Planck data I mean the power spectrum.
> I find this quite remarkable (If my understanding is correct) because
> this requires that we know (in detail) the relation between all those
> parameters and the shape of the power spectrum.
> (It is also not simple)
It is not simple, but it is well understood. There has been a HUGE
amount of research on this in the last 25 years or so. Check out
http://background.uchicago.edu/
and especially
http://background.uchicago.edu/~whu/metaanim.html
> > > In fact I think that it is easier to calculate the cosmological parameters
> > > by ONLY using type 1A SN data, because observations are available at many
> > > different distances, compared with using ONLY CMBR data because only one
> > > set of data is available for one distance.
> >
> > Within the context of Friedmann-Lemaitre cosmological models, this
> > doesn't matter. (Of course, in order to calculate lambda and Omega from
> > the m-z diagram, you need several redshifts, but in theory (i.e. if
> > measurements had no uncertainties), just one object would be enough to
> > calculate the Hubble constant.
>
> Only in theory. If you use the andromeda galaxy you are completely wrong.
ONE object, but not ANY object. Measuring the redshift is easy. You
need an object whose peculiar velocity is small compared to its cosmic
velocity (no problem if its redshift is large enough) and whose distance
is well known (this is the hard part).
> My understanding of SN data is that much less parameters are required
> to calculate the cosmological parameters, making it more simple.
This is true in a literal sense. However, the idea that supernovae are
standard candles is based on observations more than theory. (Actually,
they aren't standard candles, but the idea is that one can calculate the
absolute luminosity based on other observational quantities.) The CMB,
on the other hand, is understood from first principles.