English

Cosmology Update 1998

Astrophysics 2007-05-23 v1 High Energy Physics - Phenomenology

Abstract

For two decades the hot big-bang model has been referred to as the standard cosmology -- and for good reason. For just as long cosmologists have known that there are fundamental questions that are not addressed by the standard cosmology and point to a grander theory. The best candidate for that grander theory is inflation + cold dark matter. It holds that the Universe is flat, that slowly moving elementary particles left over from the earliest moments provide the cosmic infrastructure, and that the primeval density inhomogeneities that seed all large-scale structure arose from quantum fluctuations. There is now prima facie evidence that supports two basic tenets of this paradigm, and an avalanche of high-quality cosmological observations will soon make this case stronger or will break it. Key questions remain to be answered; foremost among them are: identification and detection of the cold dark matter particles and elucidation of the mysterious dark-energy component. These are exciting times in cosmology!

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.astro-ph/9901168,
  title  = {Cosmology Update 1998},
  author = {Michael S. Turner},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:astro-ph/9901168},
  year   = {2007}
}

Comments

26 pages LaTeX including 11 eps figures. To be published in the Proceedings of Wein 98 (Santa Fe, NM; June, 1998), eds. J.M. Bowles, P. Herczog and C. Hoffman (World Scientific, Singapore)