Publication | Closed Access
A Different Approach to Cosmology
165
Citations
27
References
1999
Year
Different ApproachTime ReversalAlternative CosmologyEngineeringModern CosmologyCosmologyInflation (Cosmology)Theoretical PhysicsDark EnergyGravity EffectsQuantum CosmologyDark MatterObservational CosmologyGravitation Theory“ Primeval AtomObservational PhysicsEarly Universe
Modern cosmology began with the solutions to Einstein's theory of gravity discovered by Aleksandr Friedmann and Georges Lemaitre in the 1920s. When combined with the Hubble redshift-distance relation, these solutions could be interpreted as showing that we live in an expanding universe. By 1930, the scientific establishment and much of the lay public believed in this expanding cosmos. It then requires only time reversal and elementary logic to conclude that the universe must originally have been so compact that we can talk of a beginning. Lemaitre tried to describe this state as the “primeval atom.”
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