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: Alternate uses: See Universe (disambiguation)


In the first half of the 20th century, the word universe was used to mean the whole spacetime continuum in which we exist, together with all the energy and matter within it. Attempts to understand the universe in this sense, on the largest possible scales, are made in cosmology, a science that has grown from physics and astronomy. During the second half of the 20th century, the development of observational cosmology, also called physical cosmology, led to a split in the meaning of the word universe, between observational cosmologists and theoretical cosmologists ; where the former (usually) abandon the hope of observing the whole spacetime continuum, the latter retain this hope, attempting to find the most reasonable speculations for modelling the whole of spacetime, despite the extreme difficulty in imagining any empirical constraints on these speculations and the risk of declining into metaphysics.

The terms known universe, observable universe, or visible universe are often used to describe the part of the Universe that we can see or otherwise observe. Those who believe it is impossible to observe the whole continuum may use our universe, referring only to that knowable by human beings in particular.

1 Expansion and age, and the Big Bang theory

The most important result of cosmology, that the Universe is expanding, is derived from redshift observations and quantified by Hubble's Law. Extrapolating this expansion back in time, one approaches a gravitational singularity, a rather abstract mathematical concept, which may or may not correspond to reality. This gives rise to the Big Bang theory, the dominant model in cosmology today. The age of the UniverseThe age of the Universe is defined as the largest possible value of proper time integrated along a timelike curve from the Earth at the present epoch back to the big bang. It was estimated to be about 13. 7 billion (13. 7 × 109) years, with an uncertainty was estimated to be about 13.7 billionTo help compare orders of magnitude this page lists dimensionless numbers between 109 and 1012. 1,000,000,000- Approximate Population of India in 2000 6,378,000,000 Estimated total midyear population for the world in 2004. Orders of magnitude (numbers). (13.7 × 109) years, with an uncertainty of 200 million years, according to NASAThe National Aeronautics and Space Administration NASA (established 1958) is the government agency responsible for the United States of America's space program and long-term general aerospace research. A civilian organization, it conducts (or oversees) re's Wilkinson Microwave Anisotropy Probe project ( WMAPThe Wilkinson Microwave Anisotropy Probe WMAP is a NASA satellite whose mission is to survey the sky to measure the temperature of the radiant heat left over from the Big Bang. The satellite was launched on June 30, 2001, at 3:46 p. EDT at Cape Canaveral). However this is based on the assumption that the underlying model used for data analysis is correct. Other methods of estimating the age of the universe give different ages.

A fundamental aspect of the Big Bang can be seen today in the observation that the farther away from us galaxiesThis article is about a celestial body. For alternate meanings see galaxy (disambiguation). Spiral Galaxy ESO 269-57 is about 150 million light-years away and 200,000 light-years across. Stars are almost always found in collections called galaxies togethe are, the faster they move away from us. It can also be seen in the cosmic microwave background radiation2001 The cosmic microwave background radiation (CMB is a form of electromagnetic radiation that fills the whole of the universe. It has the characteristics of black body radiation at a temperature of 2. It has a frequency in the microwave range. CMB and t which is the much-attenuated radiation that originated soon after the Big Bang. This background radiation is remarkably uniform in all directions, which cosmologists have attempted to explain by an initial period of rapid inflationInflation is the idea—first proposed by Alan Guth (1981)—that the nascent universe passed through a phase of exponential expansion (the inflationary epoch) that was driven by a negative vacuum energy density (positive vacuum pressure). This expansion can following the Big Bang.



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