Fr. 109.20

Modern Cosmology and the Dark Matter Problem

English · Paperback / Softback

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Klappentext This book shows how modern cosmology and astronomy have led to the need to introduce dark matter in the universe to account for mass. Some of this dark matter is in the familiar form of protons! electrons and neutrons! but most of it must have a more exotic form. The favored! but not the only! possibility is neutrinos of non-zero rest mass! pair-created in the hot big bang and surviving to the present day. After a review of modern cosmology! this book gives a detailed account of the author's recent theory in which these neutrinos decay into photons that are the main ionizing agents in hydrogen and nitrogen in the interstellar and intergalactic medium. This theory! though speculative! explains a number of rather different puzzling phenomena in astronomy and cosmology in a unified way and predicts values of various important quantities such as the mass of the decaying neutrino and the Hubble constant. Zusammenfassung Written by a cosmologist of the first rank! shows how modern cosmology and astronomy have led to the need to introduce dark matter in the universe! and explains the author's recent theory to explain some puzzling phenomena in a unified way. Inhaltsverzeichnis Preface; Part I. Dark Matter in Astronomy and Cosmology: 1. Dark matter in galaxies; 2. Dark matter in clusters of galaxies; 3. Dark matter in intergalactic space; 4. The identity of the dark matter; Part II. Ionisation Problems in Astronomy and Cosmology: 5. Diffuse ionisation in the Milky Way; 6. Diffuse ionisation in spiral galaxies; 7. The intergalactic flux of hydrogen-ionising photons; Part III. Neutrino Decay and Ionisation in the Universe: 8. The radiative decay of massive neutrinos; 9. Neutrino decay and the ionisation of the Milky Way; 10. Neutrino decay and the ionisation of spiral galaxies; 11. The intergalactic flux of ionising decay photons; 12. The reionisation of the Universe; Part IV. Observational Searches for the Neutrino Decay Line: 13. Observational searches for the neutrino decay line; References; Subject index....

Product details

Authors D. W. Sciama
Assisted by Peter Goddard (Editor), Julia Yeomans (Editor)
Publisher Cambridge University Press Academic
 
Languages English
Product format Paperback / Softback
Released 07.04.1994
 
EAN 9780521438483
ISBN 978-0-521-43848-3
Dimensions 152 mm x 228 mm x 14 mm
Series Cambridge Lecture Notes in Physics
Cambridge Lecture Notes in Phy
Subject Natural sciences, medicine, IT, technology > Physics, astronomy > Astronomy

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