Cosmic microwave background

The CMB is landmark evidence of the Big Bang theory for the origin of the universe. In the Big Bang cosmological models, during the earliest periods, the universe was filled with an opaque fog of dense, hot plasma of sub-atomic particles. As the universe expanded, this plasma cooled to the point where protons and electrons combined to form neutral atoms of mostly hydrogen. Unlike the plasma, these atoms could not scatter thermal radiation by Thomson scattering, and so the universe became transparent. Known as the recombination epoch, this decoupling event released photons to travel freely through space. However, the photons have grown less energetic due to the cosmological redshift associated with the expansion of the universe. The ''surface of last scattering'' refers to a shell at the right distance in space so photons are now received that were originally emitted at the time of decoupling.
The CMB is very smooth and uniform, but maps by sensitive detectors detect small but important temperature variations. Ground and space-based experiments such as COBE, WMAP and Planck have been used to measure these temperature inhomogeneities. The anisotropy structure is influenced by various interactions of matter and photons up to the point of decoupling, which results in a characteristic pattern of tiny ripples that varies with angular scale. The distribution of the anisotropy across the sky has frequency components that can be represented by a power spectrum displaying a sequence of peaks and valleys. The peak values of this spectrum hold important information about the physical properties of the early universe: the first peak determines the overall curvature of the universe, while the second and third peak detail the density of normal matter and so-called dark matter, respectively. Extracting fine details from the CMB data can be challenging, since the emission has undergone modification by foreground features such as galaxy clusters. Provided by Wikipedia
Showing 181 - 200 results of 1,782 for search 'CMB', query time: 0.02s
Refine Results1
-
181Call Number: 135/A.2.1.1.2/00168
-
182Call Number: 135/A.2.1.1.2/00169
-
183Call Number: 135/A.2.1.1.2/00170
-
184Call Number: 135/A.2.1.2
-
185Call Number: 135/A.2.1.2/00171
-
186Call Number: 135/A.2.1.2/00172
-
187Call Number: 135/A.2.1.2/00173
-
188Call Number: 135/A.2.1.2/00174
-
189
-
190Call Number: 135/A.2.1.3/00175
-
191Call Number: 135/A.2.1.3/00176
-
192Call Number: 135/A.2.1.3/00177
-
193Call Number: 135/A.2.1.3/00178
-
194Call Number: 135/A.2.1.3/00179
-
195Call Number: 135/A.2.1.3/00180
-
196Call Number: 135/A.2.1.3/00181
-
197Call Number: 135/A.2.1.3/00182
-
198Call Number: 135/A.2.1.3/00183
-
199Call Number: 135/A.2.1.3/00184
-
200Call Number: 135/A.2.1.3/00185