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Search 3,721 documents across 34 fields — every claim tier-rated by evidence
3,633 are the core, quality-scored corpus (34 lettered sections — see How We Work); the remaining 88 are cross-corpus synthesis documents (68 InterDocs, 12 Connections, 8 Theories) also indexed here.
3,721 results for "Rajaraja I" — page 68 of 187
J_4_16 — Ancient Glass Technology: Production, Trade, and Innovation
Ancient glass technology represents one of humanity's most sophisticated materials-science achievements, spanning from earliest faience production (~4500 BCE, predynastic Egypt and Mesopotamia) through the revolutionary
J_4_12 — Polynesian Navigation Canoes: Oceanic Vessel Engineering
The Polynesian double-hulled sailing canoe — waka hourua (Māori), wa'a kaulua (Hawaiian), vaka (general Polynesian) — was the vessel that made possible the most extraordinary feat of maritime exploration in human history
J_4_13 — Ancient Fire Technology: Kilns, Furnaces, and Thermal Engineering
The controlled use of fire — humanity's foundational transformative technology — evolved from the earliest campfires (evidence of controlled fire use dates to at least 1 million years ago at Wonderwerk Cave, South Africa
J_4_19 — Megalithic Engineering: Quarrying, Transport, and Construction Techniques
Megalithic construction — the engineering of massive stone structures — represents one of ancient humanity's most impressive achievements. From the 2.3 million blocks of the Great Pyramid at Giza (~2560 BCE) to the 82-to
Q_1_22 — Dark Flow and Cosmic Dipole Anomalies
Dark flow refers to a claimed coherent bulk motion of galaxy clusters toward a specific region of the sky at velocities inconsistent with the predictions of standard ΛCDM cosmology, first reported by NASA Goddard astroph
Q_1_21 — Pilot Wave / Bohmian Mechanics
Pilot wave theory (also called de Broglie–Bohm theory or Bohmian mechanics) is a deterministic, non-local interpretation of quantum mechanics originally proposed by Louis de Broglie at the 1927 Solvay Conference and inde
Q_1_02 — Big Bang & Alternative Cosmologies
The Big Bang theory — that the observable universe expanded from an extremely hot, dense state ~13.8 billion years ago — is supported by three independent pillars: cosmic microwave background radiation (CMB, discovered 1
Q_1_04 — Multiverse Theories
The multiverse hypothesis — that our observable universe is one of many — arises independently from at least four domains of physics and mathematics: quantum mechanics (Everett's Many-Worlds, 1957), inflationary cosmolog
Q_1_08 — Observable Universe and Cosmic Web
The observable universe has a diameter of ~93 billion light-years (comoving distance) and contains an estimated 2 trillion galaxies (Conselice et al. 2016), ~10²⁴ stars, and ~10⁸⁰ atoms. But its most striking feature is
Q_1_14 — Vacuum Energy and the Cosmological Constant Problem
The cosmological constant problem is widely regarded as the most severe fine-tuning problem in all of physics. Quantum field theory predicts that the vacuum of spacetime is not empty but seethes with zero-point fluctuati
Q_1_15 — Dark Energy Models and Quintessence
The accelerating expansion of the universe, discovered in 1998 via Type Ia supernovae, demands an explanation. The simplest model — Einstein's cosmological constant Λ with equation of state $w = p/\rho = -1$ exactly — fi
Q_1_05 — Holographic Principle
The holographic principle proposes that all information contained within a volume of space can be encoded on the boundary surface of that region. First suggested by Gerard 't Hooft (1993) and developed by Leonard Susskin
Q_1_23 — White Holes: Theory and Implications
A white hole is the time-reversed analogue of a black hole — a theoretical spacetime region from which matter and light can emerge but into which nothing can enter, as opposed to a black hole's event horizon from which n
Q_1_24 — Cosmic Microwave Background Deep Analysis
The Cosmic Microwave Background (CMB) is the oldest observable electromagnetic radiation in the universe — thermal radiation released approximately 380,000 years after the Big Bang (redshift z ≈ 1,100) when the universe
Q_1_11 — Cosmological Redshift and the Hubble Law
The discovery that distant galaxies' light is systematically shifted toward longer (redder) wavelengths was the first observational evidence that the universe is expanding. Vesto Slipher's spectroscopic measurements (191
Q_1_16 — History of Cosmology: Ancient to Modern
Cosmology — the study of the universe's origin, structure, and fate — is humanity's oldest intellectual pursuit and its most modern science. From the flat-earth mythologies of ancient Mesopotamia through the geocentric c
Q_1_17 — Modified Gravity Theories (MOND, TeVeS, and Alternatives to Dark Matter)
Modified Newtonian Dynamics (MOND) is a hypothesis proposed by Mordehai Milgrom in 1983 that modifies Newton's second law at very low accelerations (below approximately 1.2 × 10⁻¹⁰ m/s²) to explain galaxy rotation curves
Q_1_07 — CMB Anomalies and the Axis of Evil
The Cosmic Microwave Background (CMB) — the afterglow of the Big Bang, emitted ~380,000 years after the universe began — is the most precisely measured radiation in the history of science. It matches the theoretical pred
Q_1_18 — Loop Quantum Gravity: Discrete Spacetime and the Planck Scale
Loop Quantum Gravity (LQG) is one of two major approaches (alongside string theory) to the quantization of general relativity — the long-sought unification of quantum mechanics and Einstein's theory of gravity. LQG's fou
Q_1_19 — Cosmic Inflation Alternatives: Bouncing, Cyclic, and Variable Speed of Light Models
Cosmic inflation — the paradigm that the universe underwent exponential expansion in the first ~10⁻³⁶ to 10⁻³² seconds — has been the standard framework for explaining the horizon problem (why the cosmic microwave backgr
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