Timeline of cosmology
Timeline of cosmology
- 1576 - Thomas Digges modifies
the Copernican system by removing its outer edge and replacing the edge with a
star-filled unbounded space
- 1610 - Johannes Kepler uses
the dark night sky to argue for a finite universe
- 1720 - Edmund Halley puts forth
an early form of Olbers' paradox
- 1744 - Jean-Philippe de Cheseaux puts forth an early form of Olbers' paradox
- 1826 - Heinrich
Wilhelm Olbers puts forth Olbers' paradox
- 1905 - Albert Einstein
publishes the Special Theory of Relativity, positing that space
and time are not separate continuums
- 1915 - Albert Einstein
publishes the General Theory of Relativity,
showing that an energy density warps spacetime
- 1917 - Willem de Sitter
derives an isotropic static cosmology with a cosmological
constant as well as an empty expanding cosmology with a cosmological constant, termed a de Sitter universe
- 1922 - Vesto Slipher summarizes
his findings on the spiral nebulae's systematic redshifts
- 1922 - Alexander
Friedmann finds a solution to the Einstein field
equations which suggests a general expansion of space
- 1927 - Georges LemaƮtre
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 the cosmological principle
- 1934 - Georges LemaƮtre
interprets the cosmological constant as due to a vacuum energy with an
unusual perfect fluid equation of state
- 1938 - Paul Dirac presents a
cosmological theory where the gravitational constant decreases slowly so that the age of the universe divided by the atomic
light-crossing time always equals the ratio of the electric force to the gravitational force between a proton and electron
- 1948 - Ralph Alpher, Hans Bethe("in absentia"), and George
Gamow examine element synthesis in a rapidly expanding and cooling universe and suggest that the elements were produced by
rapid neutron capture
- 1948 - Hermann Bondi, Thomas Gold, and Fred Hoyle propose
steady state cosmologies based on the perfect cosmological principle
- 1948 - George Gamow predicts the
existence of the cosmic
microwave background radiation by considering the behavior of primordial radiation in an expanding universe.
- 1951 - William McCrea shows that the steady state C-field can be accommodated within general
relativity by interpreting it as a contribution to the energy-momentum tensor with an unusual equation of state
- 1961 - Robert Dicke argues that
carbon-based life can only arise when the
Dirac large numbers hypothesis is true
because this is when burning stars exist; first use of the weak anthropic principle
- 1963 - Fred Hoyle and Jayant Narlikar show that the steady
state theory can explain the isotropy of the universe because deviations from isotropy and homogeneity exponentially decay in time
- 1964 - Fred Hoyle and Roger Tayler point out that the primordial helium abundance depends on the number of neutrinos
- 1965 - Martin Rees and Dennis Sciama analyze quasar source count data and discover that the quasar density increases with redshift
- 1965 - Arno Penzias and Robert Wilson, astronomers at Bell
Labs discover the cosmic
microwave background radiation.
- 1966 - Stephen Hawking and
George Ellis show that any plausible general relativistic cosmology is
singular
- 1966 - Jim Peebles shows that the hot Big Bang predicts the correct
helium abundance
- 1967 - Andrei Sakharov
presents the requirements for a baryon-antibaryon asymmetry in the universe
- 1967 - John Bahcall, Wal Sargent, and Maarten
Schmidt measure the fine-structure splitting of spectral lines in
3C191 and thereby show that the fine-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 mechanical vacuum fluctuation
where positive mass-energy is balanced by negative gravitational potential energy
- 1974 - Robert Wagoner, William Fowler, and Fred Hoyle show that the hot Big Bang predicts the correct deuterium and lithium abundances
- 1976 - A.I. Shlyakhter (http://alexonline.info) uses samarium ratios from the prehistoric natural fission reactor in Gabon 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 five lepton families can exist
- 1980 - Alan Guth proposes the inflationary Big Bang universe as a possible solution to the horizon and
flatness problems
- 1990 - Preliminary results from NASA's COBE mission confirm the cosmic microwave background radiation is an isotropic 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.
- 1995 - Adam Riess discovers a deviation from the Hubble Law in
observations of Type Ia supernovae providing the first evidence for a non-zero
cosmological constant.
- 2001 - Evidence for the fine structure constant varying over the lifetime of the universe is published.
- 2003 - NASA's WMAP takes first detailed "baby picture" of the universe by means of the
Cosmic microwave background
radiation. The image reveals the universe is 13.7 billion years old (within one
percent error) and that the Lambda-CDM model and the inflationary theory is correct.
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