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- Introduction: Cosmology - New Scientist
The WMAP spacecraft put the standard picture of cosmology on a firm footing by precisely measuring the spectrum of fluctuations in the microwave background, which fits a universe 13 7 billion
- The universe lines up along the axis of evil. Coincidence?
COSMOLOGISTS called it the axis of evil Spotted in 2005 in the cosmic microwave background, the all-pervading afterglow of the big bang, the axis was a peculiar alignment of features where we
- Cosmology news, articles and features | New Scientist
cosmology Physics Light has been made into a fluid that simulates space-time By using light to emulate the structure of space-time, researchers can better understand black holes – and the
- A legendary cosmologist on how to find a deeper theory of the universe
JIM PEEBLES is widely known as the architect of modern cosmology – and its nice-guy-in-chief Awarding his half-share of the 2019 Nobel prize for physics, the committee said he “took on the
- One of the biggest mysteries of cosmology may finally be solved
The expansion rate of the universe, measured by the Hubble constant, has been one of the most controversial numbers in cosmology for years, and we seem at last to be close to nailing it down
- The cosmic landscape of time that explains our universes expansion
Space The cosmic landscape of time that explains our universe's expansion A strange new conception of how time warps across the universe does away with cosmology's most mysterious entity, dark energy
- We live in a cosmic void so empty that it breaks the laws of cosmology
Space We live in a cosmic void so empty that it breaks the laws of cosmology Mounting evidence suggests our galaxy sits at the centre of an expanse of nothingness 2 billion light years wide
- Top 10: Weirdest cosmology theories - New Scientist
3 Superfluid space-time One of the most outlandish new theories of cosmology is that space-time is actually a superfluid substance, flowing with zero friction Then if the universe is rotating
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