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  2. The Scale of the Universe - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Scale_of_the_Universe

    The Scale of the Universe is an interactive online visualization tool first created in 2010 by Cary and Michael Huang, two brothers from Moraga, California. [1] [2] ...

  3. Observable universe - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Observable_universe

    The End of Greatness is an observational scale discovered at roughly 100 Mpc (roughly 300 million light-years) where the lumpiness seen in the large-scale structure of the universe is homogenized and isotropized in accordance with the Cosmological Principle. [58] At this scale, no pseudo-random fractalness is apparent. [68]

  4. Universe - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Universe

    The universe is bathed in highly isotropic microwave radiation that corresponds to a thermal equilibrium blackbody spectrum of roughly 2.72548 kelvins. [7] The hypothesis that the large-scale universe is homogeneous and isotropic is known as the cosmological principle. [116]

  5. Chronology of the universe - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chronology_of_the_universe

    From about 9.8 billion years of cosmic time, [13] the universe's large-scale behavior is believed to have gradually changed for the third time in its history. Its behavior had originally been dominated by radiation (relativistic constituents such as photons and neutrinos) for the first 47,000 years, and since about 370,000 years of cosmic time ...

  6. Shape of the universe - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shape_of_the_universe

    e. In physical cosmology, the shape of the universe refers to both its local and global geometry. Local geometry is defined primarily by its curvature, while the global geometry is characterised by its topology (which itself is constrained by curvature). General relativity explains how spatial curvature (local geometry) is constrained by gravity.

  7. Friedmann equations - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Friedmann_equations

    The Friedmann equations, also known as the Friedmann–Lemaître ( FL) equations, are a set of equations in physical cosmology that govern the expansion of space in homogeneous and isotropic models of the universe within the context of general relativity. They were first derived by Alexander Friedmann in 1922 from Einstein's field equations of ...

  8. Cosmological horizon - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cosmological_horizon

    Cosmological horizon. A cosmological horizon is a measure of the distance from which one could possibly retrieve information. [ 1] This observable constraint is due to various properties of general relativity, the expanding universe, and the physics of Big Bang cosmology. Cosmological horizons set the size and scale of the observable universe.

  9. Lambda-CDM model - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lambda-CDM_model

    The expansion of the universe is parameterized by a dimensionless scale factor = (with time counted from the birth of the universe), defined relative to the present time, so = =; the usual convention in cosmology is that subscript 0 denotes present-day values, so denotes the age of the universe. The scale factor is related to the observed ...