Analysis of information sources in references of the Wikipedia article "Universe" in English language version.
Galaxy surveys have found ~10% of these baryons in collapsed objects such as galaxies, groups, and clusters [...] Of the remaining 80%–90% of cosmological baryons, approximately half can be accounted for in the low-z [intergalactic medium]
Galaxy surveys have found ~10% of these baryons in collapsed objects such as galaxies, groups, and clusters [...] Of the remaining 80%–90% of cosmological baryons, approximately half can be accounted for in the low-z [intergalactic medium]
New interpretations appear every year. None ever disappear.
the Chaldaean Seleucus from Seleucia
the heliocentrical astronomy invented by Aristarchos of Samos and still defended a century later by Seleucos the Babylonian
Galaxy surveys have found ~10% of these baryons in collapsed objects such as galaxies, groups, and clusters [...] Of the remaining 80%–90% of cosmological baryons, approximately half can be accounted for in the low-z [intergalactic medium]
New interpretations appear every year. None ever disappear.
Galaxy surveys have found ~10% of these baryons in collapsed objects such as galaxies, groups, and clusters [...] Of the remaining 80%–90% of cosmological baryons, approximately half can be accounted for in the low-z [intergalactic medium]
the Chaldaean Seleucus from Seleucia
the heliocentrical astronomy invented by Aristarchos of Samos and still defended a century later by Seleucos the Babylonian
πᾶς
ὅλος
κόσμος
[Q] Why do particle physicists care so much about the Higgs particle?
[A] Well, actually, they don't. What they really care about is the Higgs field, because it is so important. [emphasis in original]
Galaxy surveys have found ~10% of these baryons in collapsed objects such as galaxies, groups, and clusters [...] Of the remaining 80%–90% of cosmological baryons, approximately half can be accounted for in the low-z [intergalactic medium]
the Chaldaean Seleucus from Seleucia
πᾶς
ὅλος
κόσμος
Galaxy surveys have found ~10% of these baryons in collapsed objects such as galaxies, groups, and clusters [...] Of the remaining 80%–90% of cosmological baryons, approximately half can be accounted for in the low-z [intergalactic medium]
[Q] Why do particle physicists care so much about the Higgs particle?
[A] Well, actually, they don't. What they really care about is the Higgs field, because it is so important. [emphasis in original]
Galaxy surveys have found ~10% of these baryons in collapsed objects such as galaxies, groups, and clusters [...] Of the remaining 80%–90% of cosmological baryons, approximately half can be accounted for in the low-z [intergalactic medium]
New interpretations appear every year. None ever disappear.