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Missing matter


Tormod

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this is interesting stuff:

96 percent of cosmos puzzles astronomers

 

From CNN: "The Earth, moon, sun and all visible stars in the sky make up less than one percent of the universe. Almost all the rest is dark matter and dark energy, unknown forces that puzzle astronomers."

 

I wrote a hypography on missing matter a while back, it may be a bit outdated now:

Missing Matter hypography

 

Tormod

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The article states:

 

"Dark energy will cause the universe to expanded faster and faster and eventually, over time, we will see less and less of it," Kirshner said. Over millions of years, familiar stars and nearby galaxies will disappear from view and the sky, now choked with stars, will slowly darken.

 

"The piece of the universe that we can see will get lonelier and lonelier," he said.

 

This may not be the final outcome of the universe. A long time ago a "steady state" theory of cosmology thought that the average density of the university is constant. The measurement of the microwave background radiation and support of the "big bang" theory left this theory in the dust. New theorys now declare that it is possible that this may still be somewhat true, if protons and electrons are spontaneously appearing in interstellar space. There is currently not much evidence for this, however, and the theory is not widely accepted. It is good to know that there are other opinion.

 

Quasi steady state theory:

http://www.iisc.ernet.in/pramana/dec1999/c3.pdf

http://casswww.ucsd.edu/personal/gburbidge.html

 

 

The original steady state theory:

http://cosmology.berkeley.edu/Education/cosprinc.html#steadystate

 

Awesome site with questions and answers on cosmology:

http://www.astro.ucla.edu/~wright/cosmology_faq.html

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