Encyclopedia of Physical Science and Technology, Volume 4Academic Press, 1992 - Physical sciences |
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Page 540
... universe has a finite age , each observer is surrounded by a particle horizon : no comoving particle beyond this horizon could have yet made its presence known to us in any way , for there has not yet been sufficient time for light ( or ...
... universe has a finite age , each observer is surrounded by a particle horizon : no comoving particle beyond this horizon could have yet made its presence known to us in any way , for there has not yet been sufficient time for light ( or ...
Page 542
... universe has evolved in a manner independent of very distant regions . Hence the evolution of the observable universe should be explicable in terms of a model that assumes the universe to be the same everywhere . In light of this fact ...
... universe has evolved in a manner independent of very distant regions . Hence the evolution of the observable universe should be explicable in terms of a model that assumes the universe to be the same everywhere . In light of this fact ...
Page 594
... universe was much hotter and denser than it is now . The ap- parent overthrow of the perfect cosmological principle encouraged questioning of the assump- tion of spatial homogeneity and isotropy . Since the empirical evidence in favor ...
... universe was much hotter and denser than it is now . The ap- parent overthrow of the perfect cosmological principle encouraged questioning of the assump- tion of spatial homogeneity and isotropy . Since the empirical evidence in favor ...
Contents
Guide to Using the Encyclopedia ix Concrete Reinforced | 323 |
Compilers Computer Science 1 Controls Adaptive Systems | 345 |
Composite Materials 17 Controls Bilinear Systems | 355 |
Copyright | |
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algorithm applications atoms coefficients complex components computer network concrete constant convex convex sets coordinates corrosion cosmic cosmic inflation cosmic rays cryogenic defined density developed electrons encryption energy equations example factor false vacuum feedback field filter finite flow Fourier Fourier transform frequency function gradient gray level heat Higgs fields hologram input integral ions ligand linear liquid load logic magnetic matrix measurements ment merge sort metal method nonlinear observer operations output oxide parameters particles phase photons physical pixel plant polynomial predicted pressure problem processor properties puter pyrolysis reconstruction reinforcement result sampling Section sequence shown in Fig signal solution space step step response structure superfluid surface techniques temperature Theorem theory thermal time-varying system tion transform ture universe variables vector wave front zero