Cosmic microwave background radiation temperature in a dissipative universe
Nobuyoshi Komatsu, Shigeo Kimura

TL;DR
This paper investigates how the temperature-redshift relation of the cosmic microwave background is affected by dissipation in a cosmological model, finding that low dissipation aligns with observations while high dissipation does not.
Contribution
It introduces a phenomenological dissipative model incorporating a nonzero cosmological constant and derives the T--z relation, highlighting the impact of dissipation on cosmic microwave background temperature evolution.
Findings
Linear T--z relation matches observations for low dissipation.
High dissipation causes deviations from the linear T--z law.
Weak dissipation models agree with structure formation data.
Abstract
The relationship between the cosmic microwave background radiation temperature and the redshift, i.e., the -- relation, is examined in a phenomenological dissipative model. The model contains two constant terms, as if a nonzero cosmological constant and a dissipative process are operative in a homogeneous, isotropic, and spatially flat universe. The -- relation is derived from a general radiative temperature law, as appropriate for describing nonequilibrium states in a creation of cold dark matter (CCDM) model. Using this relation, the radiation temperature in the late universe is calculated as a function of a dissipation rate ranging from , corresponding to a nondissipative CDM model, to , corresponding to a fully dissipative CCDM model. The -- relation for is linear for standard cosmology and is…
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