According to this Wikipedia article, the universe is expanding adiabatically.
However, any system that is expanding adiabatically must be losing energy $\left(\mathrm{d}E = -p\,\mathrm{d}V\right) .$
Does not this violate conservation of energy, as the internal energy of the universe is decreasing?
For any finite system expanding adiabatically, the conservation of energy is not violated as the system transfers its internal energy into the rest of the universe through the form of work.
However, when the whole universe is taken as the system, assuming there is nothing outside it (I am not very sure about this statement), where is the work done going into?
Note: A constant energy free expansion model will imply energy density times the volume is constant, so $T^4 V = \text{constant}$, or $T \propto a^{-\frac{3}{4}}$.
But the adiabatic expansion model implies $TV^{\frac{1}{3}} = \text{constant}$, or $T \propto \frac{1}{a}$, where $a$ is the scale factor.
Please note that I am looking for an explanation that can be understood without much knowledge in General Relativity.