M
Mordred
Guest
Tricky to choose a title fotr this one I was in the process of studying various inflation theories etc and came across a very informative and well written article
http://www.google.ca/imgres?imgurl=http ... s%3Disch:1
yeesh talk about a long link hope it takes on this site.
Anyways they discuss red shift some new recent numbers for the several cosmological constants. Including refinements to the hubble constant. I'll have to research that term later on lol.
They also describe in excellent detail the different inflation models and show various ages of the universe.
The article sort of makes me wonder if matter is the foam of the non baryonic matter or rather matter is a layer of joining interactions between temperature variations, dark matter and gravity. many of the images I've seen seen on the web like structure of matter and dark matter usually remind me of this. This article seems to state similar towards the end of it. How much of fluidic theory is applied to this? As I'm not in this field of study professionally I'm kind of curious to the answer. Thought It would be useful as a reference as I've often seen various questions on this site that this article could prove useful in answering.
http://www.google.ca/imgres?imgurl=http ... s%3Disch:1
yeesh talk about a long link hope it takes on this site.
Anyways they discuss red shift some new recent numbers for the several cosmological constants. Including refinements to the hubble constant. I'll have to research that term later on lol.
They also describe in excellent detail the different inflation models and show various ages of the universe.
The article sort of makes me wonder if matter is the foam of the non baryonic matter or rather matter is a layer of joining interactions between temperature variations, dark matter and gravity. many of the images I've seen seen on the web like structure of matter and dark matter usually remind me of this. This article seems to state similar towards the end of it. How much of fluidic theory is applied to this? As I'm not in this field of study professionally I'm kind of curious to the answer. Thought It would be useful as a reference as I've often seen various questions on this site that this article could prove useful in answering.