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33 results for "gravitational redshift" — page 2 of 2
Q_2_10 — Cosmic Voids and Large-Scale Structure
Cosmic voids are the most voluminous structures in the universe — vast, roughly spherical regions of space spanning 20–300 Mpc (65–1,000 million light-years) that contain far fewer galaxies than average. Together with fi
Q_2_01 — Black Holes, Singularities, and Information
Black holes are regions of spacetime where gravity is so extreme that nothing — not even light — can escape once it crosses the event horizon. Predicted by general relativity (Schwarzschild solution, 1916), regarded as m
Q_3_05 — Olbers' Paradox and the Dark Night Sky
Olbers' paradox — named after German astronomer Heinrich Olbers (1826), though discussed earlier by Kepler (1610), Halley (1720), and de Chéseaux (1744) — asks: if the universe is infinite, static, and uniformly filled w
Q_3_10 — Tidal Forces, Roche Limits, and Orbital Mechanics
Tidal forces — differential gravitational pulls across an extended body — and orbital mechanics — the motion of objects under gravitational influence — are fundamental physical phenomena governing everything from Earth's
Q_3_07 — Plasma Cosmology and the Electric Universe Hypothesis
Plasma cosmology and its populist extension, the Electric Universe (EU) hypothesis, propose that electromagnetic forces — rather than gravity — are the dominant organizing force in the cosmos, and that plasma (ionized ga
Q_3_11 — Cosmic Reionization and First Stars
The Epoch of Reionization (EoR) refers to the period in cosmic history (~150 million to ~1 billion years after the Big Bang, redshifts z ≈ 15–6) when the first luminous sources — Population III (Pop III) stars, early gal
O_2_19 — Expanding Earth Theory
The expanding Earth hypothesis proposes that the planet has significantly increased in radius (and possibly mass) over geological time, with continental drift and ocean basin formation being consequences of this expansio
ZA_2_15 — Quantum Gravity Phenomenology: Searching for Planck-Scale Physics
Quantum gravity phenomenology is the enterprise of identifying and testing observable consequences — however faint — of the quantum nature of spacetime, bridging the gap between the ultra-high energies of the Planck scal
ZA_2_08 — Modified Gravity Theories: MOND, f(R), and Alternatives to Dark Matter
Modified gravity theories attempt to explain the "missing mass" problem — the discrepancy between observed gravitational effects and visible matter — without invoking dark matter particles. The most empirically successfu
ZA_2_03 — General and Special Relativity — Einstein's Revolution
Albert Einstein's two theories of relativity — special (1905) and general (1915) — fundamentally reshaped the understanding of space, time, mass, energy, and gravity. Special relativity, built on Lorentz invariance and t
ZA_5_12 — Quantum Metrology: Precision Beyond Classical Limits
Quantum metrology exploits quantum phenomena — entanglement, squeezing, and quantum correlations — to achieve measurement precision surpassing the standard quantum limit (SQL, also called the shot-noise limit) that bound
ZA_4_09 — Planck Units and Natural Constants
Planck units — constructed from the three fundamental dimensional constants c (speed of light), G (gravitational constant), and ℏ (reduced Planck constant) — define the natural scales where quantum mechanics, gravity, an
ZA_3_08 — Unification Physics: Theory of Everything
Unification — the quest to describe all fundamental forces of nature within a single theoretical framework — is the most ambitious program in physics, tracing from Maxwell's unification of electricity and magnetism (1865
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