
Cosmologists at Perimeter Institute seek to help pin down the constituents and history of our universe, and the rules governing its origin and evolution. Many of the most interesting clues about physics beyond the standard model (e.g., dark matter, dark energy, the matter/anti-matter asymmetry, and the spectrum of primordial density perturbations], come from cosmological observations, and cosmological observations are often the best way to test or constrain a proposed modification of the laws of nature, since such observations can probe length scales, time scales, and energy scales that are beyond the reach of terrestrial laboratories.
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Implications of a Preferred Direction During Inflation
Mark Wise California Institute of Technology (Caltech)
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Standard 4-D gravity on a brane in six dimensional flux compactifications
Lorenzo Sorbo University of Massachusetts Amherst
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Dark Matter, Dark Energy, or Worse?
Sean Carroll California Institute of Technology (Caltech) - Division of Physics Mathematics & Astronomy
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Cosmological tests of general relativity
Yong-Seon Song University of Portsmouth
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Probing cosmic inflation: WMAP and beyond
Joanna Dunkley Princeton University
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New cosmic maps & measurements
Max Tegmark Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) - Department of Physics
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The Mathematical Universe
Max Tegmark Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) - Department of Physics
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Quantum cosmology and the conditions at the birth of the universe
Serge Winitzki Ludwig-Maximilians-Universität München (LMU)
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Superluminal - scalar fields and cosmology
Alex Vikman New York University (NYU)
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