Big Bang Current Events | Big Bang News | 2
|
| Page
2 of
13 |
244 Results |
|
|
|
Sort By:
Page Views | Date |
Cosmologists aim to observe first moments of universe During the next decade, a delicate measurement of primordial light could reveal convincing evidence for the popular cosmic inflation theory, which proposes that a random, microscopic density fluctuation in the fabric of space and time gave birth to the universe in a hot big bang approximately 13.7 billion years ago. view more (2009-02-17)
Physicists find way to 'see' extra dimensions Peering backward in time to an instant after the big bang, physicists at the University of Wisconsin-Madison have devised an approach that may help unlock the hidden shapes of alternate dimensions of the universe. view more (2007-02-05)
NIST super-sensors to measure 'signature' of inflationary universe What happened in the first trillionth of a trillionth of a trillionth of a second after the Big Bang? view more (2009-05-04)
Hubble finds hundreds of young galaxies in the early Universe Astronomers analysing two of the deepest views of the cosmos made with the NASA/ESA Hubble Space Telescope have uncovered a gold mine of galaxies, more than 500, that existed less than a thousand million years after the Big Bang. view more (2006-09-25)
Spallation Neutron Source sends first neutrons to 'Big Bang' beam line New analytical tools coming on line at the Spallation Neutron Source, the Department of Energy's state-of-the-art neutron science facility at Oak Ridge National Laboratory, include a beam line dedicated to nuclear physics studies. view more (2008-10-10)
Physicists lead the field in solving matter mystery of the Big Bang A University of Sussex-led team of scientists is ahead in the race to solve one of the biggest mysteries of our physical world: why the Universe contains matter. With the help of a new £2.3 million grant, the team is working on a project to make one of the most sensitive measurements ever of sub-atomic particles. The results, expected within... view more... (2003-12-10)
Far away galaxy under the microscope An international group of astronomers have discovered large disc galaxies akin to our Milky Way that must have formed on a rapid time scale, only 3 billion years after the Big Bang. view more (2006-08-17)
Into the Epoch of Galaxy Formation Current theories hypothesize that more than 80% of all stars ever formed were assembled in galaxies during the latter half of the elapsed lifetime of the Universe, i.e., during the past 7-8 billion years. view more (2000-02-17)
Polarizers may enhance remote chemical detection Chemists can analyze the composition of a suspected bomb -- without actually touching and possibly detonating it -- using a technique called laser-induced breakdown spectroscopy, or LIBS. view more (2009-03-12)
Examination of radiation left from birth of universe could alter theories Using relic radiation from the birth of the universe, astrophysicists at the University of Illinois have proposed a new way of measuring the fine-structure constant in the past, and comparing it with today. view more (2007-04-03)
CU-Boulder supercomputer simulation of universe may help in search for missing matter Much of the gaseous mass of the universe is bound up in a tangled web of cosmic filaments that stretch for hundreds of millions of light-years, according to a new supercomputer study by a team led by the University of Colorado at Boulder. view more (2007-12-07)
Space is dusty, and now astronomers know why Massive star supernovae have been major "dust factories" ever since the first generations of stars formed several hundred million years after the Big Bang, according to an international study published in Science Express today. view more (2006-06-09)
VLT Observations Confirm that the Universe Was Hotter in the Past UVES Measures the Cosmic Temperature 12 Billion Years Ago Summary A fundamental prediction of the Big Bang theory has finally been verified. For the first time, an actual measurement has been made of the temperature of the cosmic microwave background radiation, at a time when the Universe was only about 2.5 billion years old. This fundamental and... view more... (2000-12-19)
Scientists weigh ingredients in recipe of the Universe An international team of scientists from Cambridge, Manchester and Tenerife has released the first results of new high-precision observations of the relic radiation from the Big Bang, often called the cosmic microwave background or CMB. These observations have been made with a novel radio telescope called the Very Small Array (VSA) situated on... view more... (2002-05-23)
To understand the universe, science calls on the ultrasmall Will the universe expand outward for all of eternity and end in a vast, dark, cold, sterile, diffuse nothingness? Or will the "Big Bang" - the gargantuan explosion that formed the universe 14 billion years ago - end in the "Big Crunch?" view more (2009-08-17)
After the Big Bang: Project Explores Seconds that Shaped the Universe Kent State faculty and graduate students are among a team of physicists who recreated the material essence of the universe as it would have been mere microseconds after the Big Bang—a quark-gluon plasma. view more (2006-07-13)
Possible cosmic defect may be a window into the early universe An unusual cold spot in the oldest radiation in the universe, the cosmic microwave background, may be caused by a cosmic defect created just after the Big Bang, a Spanish and U.K. research team has found. view more (2007-10-26)
Study shows clumps and streams of dark matter in inner regions of the Milky Way Using one of the most powerful supercomputers in the world to simulate the halo of dark matter that envelopes our galaxy, researchers found dense clumps and streams of the mysterious stuff lurking in the inner regions of the halo, in the same neighborhood as our solar system. view more (2008-08-07)
Study sheds new light on early star formation in the universe A groundbreaking study has provided new insight into the way the first stars were formed at the start of the Universe, some 13 billion years ago. view more (2007-09-14)
Hubble and Spitzer Space Telescopes find 'Lego-block' galaxies in early universe The conventional model for galaxy evolution predicts that small galaxies in the early Universe evolved into the massive galaxies of today by coalescing. Nine Lego-like "building block" galaxies initially detected by Hubble likely contributed to the construction of the Universe as we know it. view more (2007-09-07)
| |
| Page
2 of
13 |
244 Results |
|
|
|
Sort By:
Page Views | Date |
|