New Aspects of Photon Propagation in Expanding Universes
H.-J. Fahr, M. Heyl

TL;DR
This paper questions the standard assumption that photon wavelengths and CMB energy density scale with the universe's expansion as 1/S^4, exploring potential deviations and their implications for cosmology.
Contribution
It investigates whether the conventional 1/S^4 scaling of CMB energy density and photon wavelengths during cosmic expansion is accurate or if deviations occur, challenging established cosmological models.
Findings
Questions the universal validity of 1/S^4 scaling for CMB energy density.
Explores possible deviations in photon wavelength behavior during expansion.
Analyzes implications for understanding the CMB spectrum and universe's evolution.
Abstract
According to present cosmological views the energy density of CMB (Cosmic Microwave Background) photons, freely propagating through the expanding cosmos, varies proportional to 1/S^4 with S being the scale factor of the universe. This behavior is expected, because General Theory of Relativity, in application to FLRW- (Friedmann-Lemaitre-Robertson-Walker) cosmological universes, leads to the conclusion that the photon wavelengths increase during their free passage through the spacetime metrics of the universe by the same factor as does the scale factor S. This appears to be a reasonable explanation for the presently observed Planckian CMB spectrum with its actual temperature of about 2.7 K, while at the time of its origin after the last scattering during the recombination phase its temperature should have been about 3000 K, at an epoch of about 380 ky after the Big Bang, when the scale…
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