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  • https://arxiv.org/abs/1911.08092
    Emergence of life in an inflationary universe
    Abiotic emergence of ordered information stored in the form of RNA is an important unresolved problem concerning the origin of life. A polymer longer than 40--100 nucleotides is necessary to expect a self-replicating activity, but the formation of such a long polymer having a correct nucleotide sequence by random reactions seems statistically unlikely. However, our universe, created by a single inflation event, likely includes more than $10^{100}$ Sun-like stars. If life can emerge at least once in such a large volume, it is not in contradiction with our observations of life on Earth, even if the expected number of abiogenesis events is negligibly small within the observable universe that contains only $10^{22}$ stars. Here, a quantitative relation is derived between the minimum RNA length $l_{min}$ required to be the first biological polymer, and the universe size necessary to expect the formation of such a long and active RNA by randomly adding monomers. It is then shown that an active RNA can indeed be produced somewhere in an inflationary universe, giving a solution to the abiotic polymerization problem. On the other hand, $l_{min}$ must be shorter than $sim$20 nucleotides for the abiogenesis probability close to unity on a terrestrial planet, but a self-replicating activity is not expected for such a short RNA. Therefore, if extraterrestrial organisms of a different origin from those on Earth are discovered in the future, it would imply an unknown mechanism at work to polymerize nucleotides much faster than random statistical processes.
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  • https://www.scientificamerican.com/article/the-universes-invisible-hand/
    The Universe's Invisible Hand
    Dark energy does more than hurry along the expansion of the universe. It also has a stranglehold on the shape and spacing of galaxies
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    https://simple.wikipedia.org/wiki/Universe
    Universe
    The universe is space and everything in it. It is made of many billions of stars and planets and enormous clouds of gas separated by big spaces. The Big Bang started the expansion of the universe. Astronomers use telescopes to look at distant galaxies. This is how they see what the universe looked like a long time ago. The past tense is because the light from distant parts of the Universe takes a very long time to reach us. From these observations, it seems the physical laws and constants of the universe have not changed. Physicists are currently unsure if anything existed before the Big Bang. The size of the universe is not known. History People have long had ideas about the universe. They saw the sky at night, with fixed stars and other stars moving among them. Most early ideas had the Earth at the centre of the universe. This is known as geocentrism. Some ancient Greeks thought that the universe has infinite space and has existed forever. They thought it had a set of celestial spheres which corresponded to the fixed stars, the Sun and various planets. The spheres circled about a round but unmoving Earth. ...
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  • https://nov.wikipedia.org/wiki/Universe
    Universe
    Universe es li klosat sisteme de omnum kel exista o eventa. In kosmologia li termine bli aplika a nusen universe, tum es, omnum kel nus pove observa, e li suposit extensione de lum. On pove kgooggoogaga ke exista antei universes e aftri universes. Fisikistes anke kelkifoy konsidera li posiblitate de paraleli universes. Vida anke: Varmeso-morio, fisike, astronomia, galaxie
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    https://simple.wikipedia.org/wiki/Universe
    Universe
    The universe is space and everything in it. It is made of many billions of stars and planets and enormous clouds of gas separated by big spaces. The Big Bang started the expansion of the universe. Astronomers use telescopes to look at distant galaxies. This is how they see what the universe looked like a long time ago. The past tense is because the light from distant parts of the Universe takes a very long time to reach us. From these observations, it seems the physical laws and constants of the universe have not changed. Physicists are currently unsure if anything existed before the Big Bang. The size of the universe is not known. History People have long had ideas about the universe. They saw the sky at night, with fixed stars and other stars moving among them. Most early ideas had the Earth at the centre of the universe. This is known as geocentrism. Some ancient Greeks thought that the universe has infinite space and has existed forever. They thought it had a set of celestial spheres which corresponded to the fixed stars, the Sun and various planets. The spheres circled about a round but unmoving Earth. ...
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  • https://arxiv.org/abs/0704.0646
    The Mathematical Universe
    I explore physics implications of the External Reality Hypothesis (ERH) that there exists an external physical reality completely independent of us humans. I argue that with a sufficiently broad definition of mathematics, it implies the Mathematical Universe Hypothesis (MUH) that our physical world is an abstract mathematical structure. I discuss various implications of the ERH and MUH, ranging from standard physics topics like symmetries, irreducible representations, units, free parameters, randomness and initial conditions to broader issues like consciousness, parallel universes and Godel incompleteness. I hypothesize that only computable and decidable (in Godel's sense) structures exist, which alleviates the cosmological measure problem and help explain why our physical laws appear so simple. I also comment on the intimate relation between mathematical structures, computations, simulations and physical systems.
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    https://simple.wikipedia.org/wiki/Universe
    Universe
    The universe is space and everything in it. It is made of many billions of stars and planets and enormous clouds of gas separated by big spaces. The Big Bang started the expansion of the universe. Astronomers use telescopes to look at distant galaxies. This is how they see what the universe looked like a long time ago. The past tense is because the light from distant parts of the Universe takes a very long time to reach us. From these observations, it seems the physical laws and constants of the universe have not changed. Physicists are currently unsure if anything existed before the Big Bang. The size of the universe is not known. History People have long had ideas about the universe. They saw the sky at night, with fixed stars and other stars moving among them. Most early ideas had the Earth at the centre of the universe. This is known as geocentrism. Some ancient Greeks thought that the universe has infinite space and has existed forever. They thought it had a set of celestial spheres which corresponded to the fixed stars, the Sun and various planets. The spheres circled about a round but unmoving Earth. ...
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  • https://arxiv.org/abs/1101.5476
    Applications of Bayesian model averaging to the curvature and size of the Universe
    Bayesian model averaging is a procedure to obtain parameter constraints that account for the uncertainty about the correct cosmological model. We use recent cosmological observations and Bayesian model averaging to derive tight limits on the curvature parameter, as well as robust lower bounds on the curvature radius of the Universe and its minimum size, while allowing for the possibility of an evolving dark energy component. Because flat models are favoured by Bayesian model selection, we find that model-averaged constraints on the curvature and size of the Universe can be considerably stronger than non model-averaged ones. For the most conservative prior choice (based on inflationary considerations), our procedure improves on non model-averaged constraints on the curvature by a factor of ~ 2. The curvature scale of the Universe is conservatively constrained to be R_c > 42 Gpc (99%), corresponding to a lower limit to the number of Hubble spheres in the Universe N_U > 251 (99%).
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    https://simple.wikipedia.org/wiki/Universe
    Universe
    The universe is space and everything in it. It is made of many billions of stars and planets and enormous clouds of gas separated by big spaces. The Big Bang started the expansion of the universe. Astronomers use telescopes to look at distant galaxies. This is how they see what the universe looked like a long time ago. The past tense is because the light from distant parts of the Universe takes a very long time to reach us. From these observations, it seems the physical laws and constants of the universe have not changed. Physicists are currently unsure if anything existed before the Big Bang. The size of the universe is not known. History People have long had ideas about the universe. They saw the sky at night, with fixed stars and other stars moving among them. Most early ideas had the Earth at the centre of the universe. This is known as geocentrism. Some ancient Greeks thought that the universe has infinite space and has existed forever. They thought it had a set of celestial spheres which corresponded to the fixed stars, the Sun and various planets. The spheres circled about a round but unmoving Earth. ...
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  • https://arxiv.org/abs/astro-ph/9805201
    Observational Evidence from Supernovae for an Accelerating Universe and a Cosmological Constant
    We present observations of 10 type Ia supernovae (SNe Ia) between 0.16 < z < 0.62. With previous data from our High-Z Supernova Search Team, this expanded set of 16 high-redshift supernovae and 34 nearby supernovae are used to place constraints on the Hubble constant (H_0), the mass density (Omega_M), the cosmological constant (Omega_Lambda), the deceleration parameter (q_0), and the dynamical age of the Universe (t_0). The distances of the high-redshift SNe Ia are, on average, 10% to 15% farther than expected in a low mass density (Omega_M=0.2) Universe without a cosmological constant. Different light curve fitting methods, SN Ia subsamples, and prior constraints unanimously favor eternally expanding models with positive cosmological constant (i.e., Omega_Lambda > 0) and a current acceleration of the expansion (i.e., q_0 < 0). With no prior constraint on mass density other than Omega_M > 0, the spectroscopically confirmed SNe Ia are consistent with q_0 0 at the 3.0 sigma and 4.0 sigma confidence levels, for two fitting methods respectively. Fixing a ``minimal'' mass density, Omega_M=0.2, results in the weakest detection, Omega_Lambda>0 at the 3.0 sigma confidence level. For a flat-Universe prior (Omega_M+Omega_Lambda=1), the spectroscopically confirmed SNe Ia require Omega_Lambda >0 at 7 sigma and 9 sigma level for the two fitting methods. A Universe closed by ordinary matter (i.e., Omega_M=1) is ruled out at the 7 sigma to 8 sigma level. We estimate the size of systematic errors, including evolution, extinction, sample selection bias, local flows, gravitational lensing, and sample contamination. Presently, none of these effects reconciles the data with Omega_Lambda=0 and q_0 > 0.
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    https://simple.wikipedia.org/wiki/Universe
    Universe
    The universe is space and everything in it. It is made of many billions of stars and planets and enormous clouds of gas separated by big spaces. The Big Bang started the expansion of the universe. Astronomers use telescopes to look at distant galaxies. This is how they see what the universe looked like a long time ago. The past tense is because the light from distant parts of the Universe takes a very long time to reach us. From these observations, it seems the physical laws and constants of the universe have not changed. Physicists are currently unsure if anything existed before the Big Bang. The size of the universe is not known. History People have long had ideas about the universe. They saw the sky at night, with fixed stars and other stars moving among them. Most early ideas had the Earth at the centre of the universe. This is known as geocentrism. Some ancient Greeks thought that the universe has infinite space and has existed forever. They thought it had a set of celestial spheres which corresponded to the fixed stars, the Sun and various planets. The spheres circled about a round but unmoving Earth. ...
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  • https://arxiv.org/abs/astro-ph/9901364
    Topology of the Universe: Theory and Observations
    ``One could imagine that as a result of enormously extended astronomical experience, the entire universe consists of countless identical copies of our Milky Way, that the infinite space can be partitioned into cubes each containing an exactly identical copy of our Milky Way. Would we really cling on to the assumption of infinitely many identical repetitions of the same world? >... We would be much happier with the view that these repetitions are illusory, that in reality space has peculiar connection properties so that if we leave any one cube through a side, then we immediately reenter it through the opposite side.'' (Schwarzschild 1900, translation 1998) Developments in the theoretical and observational sides of cosmic topology were slow for most of the century, but are now progressing rapidly, at the scale of most interest which is 1-10 h^-1 Gpc rather than 10kpc. The historical, mathematical and observational sides of this subject are briefly reviewed in this course.
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    Similar Pages
    https://simple.wikipedia.org/wiki/Universe
    Universe
    The universe is space and everything in it. It is made of many billions of stars and planets and enormous clouds of gas separated by big spaces. The Big Bang started the expansion of the universe. Astronomers use telescopes to look at distant galaxies. This is how they see what the universe looked like a long time ago. The past tense is because the light from distant parts of the Universe takes a very long time to reach us. From these observations, it seems the physical laws and constants of the universe have not changed. Physicists are currently unsure if anything existed before the Big Bang. The size of the universe is not known. History People have long had ideas about the universe. They saw the sky at night, with fixed stars and other stars moving among them. Most early ideas had the Earth at the centre of the universe. This is known as geocentrism. Some ancient Greeks thought that the universe has infinite space and has existed forever. They thought it had a set of celestial spheres which corresponded to the fixed stars, the Sun and various planets. The spheres circled about a round but unmoving Earth. ...
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  • https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Center_of_the_universe
    Center of the universe
    The center of the universe may refer to: Astronomy Geocentric model, the astronomical model which places Earth at the orbital center of all celestial bodies Heliocentrism, the astronomical model in which the Sun is at the orbital center of the Solar System History of the center of the Universe, a discussion of the historical view that the Universe has a center Mythology and religion Axis mundi, the mythological concept of a world center Modern geocentrism, the belief that Earth is the center of the universe as described by classical geocentric models Space and time in the Mesoamerican religion Media Center of the Universe (TV series), an American sitcom Center of the Universe, a song by Built to Spill from their album Keep It Like a Secret Center of the Universe, an album by Admiral Twin Center of the Universe (album), a 1992 album by Giant Sand "Centre of the Universe", a song from the album Epica...
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    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Center_of_the_universe
    Center of the universe
    The center of the universe may refer to: Astronomy Geocentric model, the astronomical model which places Earth at the orbital center of all celestial bodies Heliocentrism, the astronomical model in which the Sun is at the orbital center of the Solar System History of the center of the Universe, a discussion of the historical view that the Universe has a center Mythology and religion Axis mundi, the mythological concept of a world center Modern geocentrism, the belief that Earth is the center of the universe as described by classical geocentric models Space and time in the Mesoamerican religion Media Center of the Universe (TV series), an American sitcom Center of the Universe, a song by Built to Spill from their album Keep It Like a Secret Center of the Universe, an album by Admiral Twin Center of the Universe (album), a 1992 album by Giant Sand "Centre of the Universe", a song from the album Epica...
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  • The accelerated expansion of the universe is the observation that the expansion of the universe is accelerating, as opposed to decelerating. This accelerated expansion was first discovered in 1998 by two independent teams of astronomers, who found that distant supernovae were dimmer than expected. This observation suggested that the universe was expanding at an increasing rate, rather than at a decreasing rate as had been previously assumed. The cause of this accelerated expansion is still unknown, but it is thought to be related to a mysterious form of energy called dark energy.

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  • The accelerated expansion of the universe is a phenomenon observed in the late 1990s, where it was found that the universe is expanding at an ever-increasing rate. This phenomenon is believed to be caused by dark energy, a mysterious form of energy that makes up 68% of the universe. Dark energy appears to be pushing galaxies away from each other faster and faster over time, causing the accelerated expansion of the universe.

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  • .com

    #include <stdio.h>

    int main()
    {
    int num1, num2;

    printf("Enter two integers: "); // prompt user to enter two integers
    scanf("%d %d", &num1, &num2); // read two integers from user

    // check if both numbers are equal or not
    if (num1 == num2)
    printf("%d and %d are equal\n", num1, num2); // print if both numbers are equal

    else // if both numbers are not equal then check which number is greater
    (num1 > num2) ? printf("%d is greater than %d\n", num1, num2):printf("%d is greater than %d\n", num2, num1);

    return 0; // return 0 to operating system indicating program ran successfully
    }

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  • Exploring the Universe Through Science | What Is Astronomy?
    Enjoy the videos and music you love, upload original content, and share it all with friends, family, and the world on YouTube.
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  • “The Power of Telescopes: Exploring Space, Galaxies, and the Secrets of the Universe
    Enjoy the videos and music you love, upload original content, and share it all with friends, family, and the world on YouTube.
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  • Exclusive: Dakota Fanning Has Joined The Marvel Cinematic Universe
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  • A new supercomputer simulation animates the evolution of the universe
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  • Top 10 Mysteries Of Outer Space | Unraveling the Secrets of the Universe (Full Documentary)
    Enjoy the videos and music you love, upload original content, and share it all with friends, family, and the world on YouTube.
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  • Camera Roll
    Provided to YouTube by The Orchard Enterprises Camera Roll Jbrisko Jordan V Saffold Colossal Universe City 2021 Black 17 Media, LLC. x Colossal ...
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