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.
Displaying 1165 - 1176 of 2119
Format results
-
Rochester Institute of Technology
-
-
Spectral distortions of the CMB and what we might learn about early universe physics
University of Manchester -
-
Dark matter densities on small scales and implications for dark matter models
University of California, Irvine -
What is the Universe Made Of? The Case for Dark Matter and Dark Energy
McMaster University -
-
Black Hole Entropy from Loop Quantum Gravity
Pennsylvania State University -
The Electron's Link to the Kerr-Newman Metric
University of Cambridge -
New Probes of Initial State of Quantum Fluctuations During Inflation
Max-Planck-Institut für Astrophysik (MPA), Garching -
-
Is Nothing Sacred? The Cosmological Pay Off from Breaking Lorentz and Diffeormorphism Invariance
Imperial College London