Abstract
From its unique vantage point 900 kilometres above the earth's surface, NASA's Cosmic Background Explorer (COBE) satellite has a privileged view of cosmic background radiation - the remnants of the early (radiation-dominated) Universe which followed the Big Bang some ten Gigayears ago, and possibly some subsequent history. In this way astroparticle physicists get a first peek at the quantum cosmology which moulded the infant Universe.
Citation Formats
Anon.
Mapping the early Universe.
CERN: N. p.,
1991.
Web.
Anon.
Mapping the early Universe.
CERN.
Anon.
1991.
"Mapping the early Universe."
CERN.
@misc{etde_22396548,
title = {Mapping the early Universe}
author = {Anon.}
abstractNote = {From its unique vantage point 900 kilometres above the earth's surface, NASA's Cosmic Background Explorer (COBE) satellite has a privileged view of cosmic background radiation - the remnants of the early (radiation-dominated) Universe which followed the Big Bang some ten Gigayears ago, and possibly some subsequent history. In this way astroparticle physicists get a first peek at the quantum cosmology which moulded the infant Universe.}
journal = []
issue = {5}
volume = {31}
journal type = {AC}
place = {CERN}
year = {1991}
month = {Jun}
}
title = {Mapping the early Universe}
author = {Anon.}
abstractNote = {From its unique vantage point 900 kilometres above the earth's surface, NASA's Cosmic Background Explorer (COBE) satellite has a privileged view of cosmic background radiation - the remnants of the early (radiation-dominated) Universe which followed the Big Bang some ten Gigayears ago, and possibly some subsequent history. In this way astroparticle physicists get a first peek at the quantum cosmology which moulded the infant Universe.}
journal = []
issue = {5}
volume = {31}
journal type = {AC}
place = {CERN}
year = {1991}
month = {Jun}
}