Other
Scientific paper
Aug 1990
adsabs.harvard.edu/cgi-bin/nph-data_query?bibcode=1990jrasc..84..275v&link_type=abstract
Journal of the Royal Astronomical Society of Canada (ISSN 0035-872X), vol. 84, Aug. 1990, p. 275-280.
Other
1
Astronomical Models, Cosmology, Galactic Evolution, Mass Distribution, Big Bang Cosmology, Dark Matter, Hubble Constant, Quasars, Stellar Evolution
Scientific paper
Cosmology is in chaos. Currently fashionable models of the universe yield ages that are shorter than those of the oldest known stars. Between 90 and 99 percent of the mass of the universe appears to be in invisible form. Galaxies in vast regions of space seem to be drifting relative to each other with velocities of hundreds of km/sec. Furthermore, gigantic structures a few hundred million light-years across, containing tens of thousands of galaxies, have formed for reasons that are not (or are only poorly) understood. Finally, it is not clear how density enhancements large enough to form galaxies, stars and quasars could have formed in less than 1.5 x billion years from a universe which (on the basis of cosmic microwave observations), appears to have started out being incredibly smooth and homogeneous.
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