We discuss the Buchert equations, which describe the average expansion of an inhomogeneous dust universe. In the limit of small perturbations, they reduce to the Friedmann-Robertson-Walker equations. However, when the universe is very inhomogeneous, the behaviour can be qualitatively different from the FRW case. In particular, the average expansion rate can accelerate even though the local expansion rate decelerates everywhere. We clarify the physical meaning of this paradoxical feature with a simple toy model, and demonstrate how acceleration is intimately connected with gravitational collapse. This provides a link to structure formation, which in turn has a preferred time around the era when acceleration has been observed to start
AbstractExact results stemming directly from Einstein equations imply that inhomogeneous universes e...
Cosmology is investigated within a new, scalar theory of gravitation, which is a preferred-frame bim...
We investigate the recent suggestions by Barausse et al. and Kolb et al. that the acceleration of th...
We discuss the Buchert equations, which describe the average expansion of an inhomogeneous dust univ...
We discuss the physics of backreaction-driven accelerated expansion. We explain how large-scale smoo...
If the expanding and contracting regions coexist in the universe, the speed of cosmic expansion can ...
The predictions of homogeneous and isotropic cosmological models with ordinary matter and gravity ar...
Idealizing matter as a pressureless fluid and representing its motion by a peculiar--velocity field ...
In creating his gravitational field equations Einstein unjustifiedly assumed that inertial mass, and...
When taking the real, inhomogeneous and anisotropic matter distribution in the semi-local universe i...
A simple discussion on the backreaction of inhomogeneities in cosmology, focusing on the possibility...
General relativistic entropic acceleration theory may explain the present cosmic acceleration from f...
Perturbations in Prigogine's cosmological model with particle creation are investigated in the frame...
If expanding and contracting regions coexist in the universe, the speed of the cosmic vol-ume expans...
12 pages12 pages12 pagesWe consider spatially homogeneous and isotropic Friedmann-Robertson-Walker (...
AbstractExact results stemming directly from Einstein equations imply that inhomogeneous universes e...
Cosmology is investigated within a new, scalar theory of gravitation, which is a preferred-frame bim...
We investigate the recent suggestions by Barausse et al. and Kolb et al. that the acceleration of th...
We discuss the Buchert equations, which describe the average expansion of an inhomogeneous dust univ...
We discuss the physics of backreaction-driven accelerated expansion. We explain how large-scale smoo...
If the expanding and contracting regions coexist in the universe, the speed of cosmic expansion can ...
The predictions of homogeneous and isotropic cosmological models with ordinary matter and gravity ar...
Idealizing matter as a pressureless fluid and representing its motion by a peculiar--velocity field ...
In creating his gravitational field equations Einstein unjustifiedly assumed that inertial mass, and...
When taking the real, inhomogeneous and anisotropic matter distribution in the semi-local universe i...
A simple discussion on the backreaction of inhomogeneities in cosmology, focusing on the possibility...
General relativistic entropic acceleration theory may explain the present cosmic acceleration from f...
Perturbations in Prigogine's cosmological model with particle creation are investigated in the frame...
If expanding and contracting regions coexist in the universe, the speed of the cosmic vol-ume expans...
12 pages12 pages12 pagesWe consider spatially homogeneous and isotropic Friedmann-Robertson-Walker (...
AbstractExact results stemming directly from Einstein equations imply that inhomogeneous universes e...
Cosmology is investigated within a new, scalar theory of gravitation, which is a preferred-frame bim...
We investigate the recent suggestions by Barausse et al. and Kolb et al. that the acceleration of th...