- Timeline of cosmology
This timeline of cosmological theories and discoveries is a chronological catalog of the evolution of humankind's understanding of the
cosmos over the last two-plus millennia. Modern cosmological conceptions follow the development of the scientific discipline ofphysical cosmology .Pre-1900
* 15th-8th centuries BC - The "
Vedas " describe ancientHindu cosmology , in which theuniverse goes through repeated cycles of creation, destruction and rebirth, with each cycle lasting 4,320,000 years
*8th century BC -Yajnavalkya proposes aspherical Earth and a lunisolar cycle, and was attributed heliocentric ideas
*4th century BC -Aristotle proposes anEarth -centred universe in which the Earth is stationary and the universe is finite in extent but infinite in time
*3rd century BC -Aristarchus of Samos proposes aSun -centered universe
*2nd century BC -Seleucus of Seleucia elaborates on Aristarchus' heliocentric universe, using the phenomenon oftide s to explain heliocentrism
*2nd century AD -Ptolemy proposes an Earth-centred universe, with the Sun and planets revolving around the Earth
* 5th-11th centuries - Several astronomers propose a Sun-centered universe, includingAryabhata , Albumasar andAl-Sijzi
*6th century -John Philoponus proposes a universe that is finite intime and argues against the ancient Greek notion of an infinite universe
* 9th-12th centuries -Al-Kindi (Alkindus),Saadia Gaon (Saadia ben Joseph) and theAl-Ghazali (Algazel) support a universe that has a finite past and develop two logical arguments against the notion of an infinite past, one of which is later adopted byImmanuel Kant
*964 -Abd al-Rahman al-Sufi (Azophi), a Persian astronomer, makes the first recorded observations of theAndromeda Galaxy and theLarge Magellanic Cloud , the first galaxies other than the Milky Way to be observed from Earth, in his "Book of Fixed Stars "
*13th century -Nasīr al-Dīn al-Tūsī provides the first empirical evidence for theEarth's rotation on its axis
*15th century -Ali Kuşçu provides empirical evidence for the Earth's rotation on its axis and rejects the stationary Earth theories of Aristotle and Ptolemy
* 15th-16th centuries -Nilakantha Somayaji andTycho Brahe propose a universe in which the planets orbit the Sun and the Sun orbits the Earth, known as theTychonic system
*1543 -Nicolaus Copernicus publishes his heliocentric universe in his "De revolutionibus orbium coelestium "
*1576 -Thomas Digges modifies the Copernican system by removing its outer edge and replacing the edge with astar -filled unbounded space
*1584 -Giordano Bruno proposes a non-hierarchical cosmology, wherein the Copernicansolar system is not the centre of the universe, but rather, a relatively insignificantstar system , amongst an infinite multitude of others
*1610 -Johannes Kepler uses the dark night sky to argue for a finite universe
*1687 - Sir Isaac Newton's laws describe large-scale motion throughout the universe
*1720 -Edmund Halley puts forth an early form ofOlbers' paradox
*1744 -Jean-Philippe de Cheseaux puts forth an early form of Olbers' paradox
*1791 -Erasmus Darwin pens the first description of a cyclical expanding and contracting universe in his poem "The Economy of Vegetation"
*1826 -Heinrich Wilhelm Olbers puts forthOlbers' paradox
*1848 -Edgar Allan Poe offers first correct solution to Olbers' paradox in "", an essay that also suggests the expansion and collapse of the universe1900-1949
*
1905 -Albert Einstein publishes the Special Theory of Relativity, positing that space and time are not separate continua
*1915 - Albert Einstein publishes theGeneral Theory of Relativity , showing that an energy density warpsspacetime
*1917 -Willem de Sitter derives an isotropic static cosmology with acosmological constant , as well as an empty expanding cosmology with a cosmological constant, termed ade Sitter universe
*1922 -Vesto Slipher summarizes his findings on the spiral nebulae's systematicredshift s
* 1922 -Alexander Friedmann finds a solution to theEinstein field equation s which suggests a general expansion of space
*1927 -Georges Lemaître discusses the creation event of an expanding universe governed by the Einstein field equations
*1928 -Howard Percy Robertson briefly mentions that Vesto Slipher's redshift measurements combined with brightness measurements of the same galaxies indicate a redshift-distance relation
*1929 -Edwin Hubble demonstrates the linear redshift-distance relation and thus shows the expansion of the universe
*1933 -Edward Milne names and formalizes thecosmological principle
*1934 -Georges Lemaître interprets the cosmological constant as due to avacuum energy with an unusual perfect fluidequation of state
*1938 -Paul Dirac suggests the large numbers hypothesis, that the gravitational constant may be small because it is decreasing slowly with time
*1948 -Ralph Alpher ,Hans Bethe ("in absentia"), andGeorge Gamow examine element synthesis in a rapidly expanding and cooling universe, and suggest that the elements were produced by rapidneutron capture
* 1948 -Hermann Bondi ,Thomas Gold , andFred Hoyle propose steady state cosmologies based on the perfect cosmological principle
* 1948 -George Gamow predicts the existence of thecosmic microwave background radiation by considering the behavior of primordial radiation in an expanding universe1950 to 1999
* 1950 -
Fred Hoyle derisively coins the term "Big Bang".
*1961 -Robert Dicke argues thatcarbon -basedlife can only arise when the gravitational force is small, because this is when burning stars exist; first use of the weakanthropic principle
*1965 -Hannes Alfvén proposes the now-discounted concept ofambiplasma to explainbaryon asymmetry .
* 1965 -Martin Rees andDennis Sciama analyzequasar source count data and discover that the quasar density increases with redshift.
* 1965 -Arno Penzias and Robert Wilson, astronomers atBell Labs discover the 2.7 K "microwave background radiation", which earns them the 1978Nobel Prize in Physics.Robert Dicke , James Peebles, Peter Roll andDavid Todd Wilkinson interpret it as relic from the big bang.
*1966 -Stephen Hawking andGeorge Ellis show that any plausible general relativistic cosmology is singular
* 1966 -James Peebles shows that the hotBig Bang predicts the correct helium abundance
*1967 -Andrei Sakharov presents the requirements forbaryogenesis , abaryon -antibaryonasymmetry in the universe
* 1967 -John Bahcall ,Wal Sargent , andMaarten Schmidt measure the fine-structure splitting ofspectral line s in 3C191 and thereby show that thefine-structure constant does not vary significantly with time
*1968 -Brandon Carter speculates that perhaps the fundamental constants of nature must lie within a restricted range to allow the emergence of life; first use of the strong anthropic principle
*1969 -Charles Misner formally presents the Big Bang horizon problem
* 1969 -Robert Dicke formally presents the Big Bang flatness problem
*1973 -Edward Tryon proposes that the universe may be a large scale quantum mechanicalvacuum fluctuation where positive mass-energy is balanced by negative gravitationalpotential energy
*1974 -Robert Wagoner , William Fowler, and Fred Hoyle show that the hot Big Bang predicts the correctdeuterium andlithium abundances
*1976 -Alex Shlyakhter usessamarium ratios from theOklo prehistoricnatural nuclear fission reactor inGabon to show that some laws of physics have remained unchanged for over two billion years
*1977 -Gary Steigman ,David Schramm , and James Gunn examine the relation between the primordial helium abundance and number of neutrinos and claim that at most fivelepton families can exist.
*1981 -Viacheslav Mukhanov and G. Chibisov propose that quantum fluctuations could lead to large scale structure in an inflationary universe
*1981 -Alan Guth proposes the inflationary Big Bang universe as a possible solution to the horizon and flatness problems
*1990 - Preliminary results fromNASA 'sCOBE mission confirm thecosmic microwave background radiation is anisotropic blackbody to an astonishing one part in 105 precision, thus eliminating the possibility of an integrated starlight model proposed for the background by steady state enthusiasts.
*1990s - Ground based cosmic microwave background experiments measure the first peak, determine that the universe is geometrically flat.
*1998 - Controversial evidence for thefine structure constant varying over the lifetime of the universe is first published.
* 1998 -Adam Riess ,Saul Perlmutter and others discover the cosmic acceleration in observations ofType Ia supernova e providing the first evidence for a non-zerocosmological constant .
* 1999 - Measurements of thecosmic microwave background radiation (most notably by theBOOMERanG experiment see Mauskopf et al., 1999, Melchiorri et al., 1999, de Bernardis et al. 2000) provide evidence for oscillations (peaks) in theanisotropy angular spectrum as expected in the standard model of cosmological structure formation. These results indicates that the geometry of the universe is flat. Together with large scale structure data, this provides complementary evidence for a non-zero cosmological constant.ince 2000
*
2002 - TheCosmic Background Imager (CBI) inChile obtained images of the cosmic microwave background radiation with the highest angular resolution of 4 arcmin. It also obtained the anisotropy spectrum at high-resolution not covered before up to l ~ 3000. It found a slight excess in power at high-resolution (l > 2500) not yet completely explained, the so-called "CBI-excess".
*2003 - NASA'sWMAP obtained full-sky detailed pictures of the cosmic microwave background radiation. The image can be interpreted to indicate that the universe is 13.7 billion years old (within one percent error) and confirm that theLambda-CDM model and the inflationary theory are correct.
*2003 - TheSloan Great Wall is discovered.
*2004 - TheCosmic Background Imager first obtained the E-mode polarization spectrum of the cosmic microwave background radiation.
*2006 - The long-awaited three-yearWMAP results are released, confirming previous analysis, correcting several points, and including polarization data.ee also
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Timeline of the Big Bang
*List of cosmologists
*Cosmology@Home
*Non-standard cosmology
*Buddhist cosmology
*Hindu cosmology
*Maya mythology References
* Bunch, Bryan, and Alexander Hellemans, "The History of Science and Technology: A Browser's Guide to the Great Discoveries, Inventions, and the People Who Made Them from the Dawn of Time to Today". ISBN 0-618-22123-9
* P. Mauskopf et al.,astro-ph/9911444, Astrophys.J. 536 (2000) L59-L62.
* A. Melchiorri et al.,astro-ph/9911445, Astrophys.J. 536 (2000) L63-L66.
* P. de Bernardis et al., astro-ph/0004404, Nature 404 (2000) 955-959.
* A. Readhead et al., Polarization observations with the Cosmic Background Imager, Science 306 (2004), 836-844.
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