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In simplest terms, the rate at which the universe expands on paper doesn’t match actual astronomical observations. That speed ...
In the grand puzzle of the cosmos, one question continues to defy easy answers: how fast is the universe expanding?
A faint cosmic spin – one rotation per 500 billion years – could resolve the stubborn Hubble tension by tweaking standard ...
Dr. Richard Lieu, a physics professor at The University of Alabama in Huntsville (UAH), a part of The University of Alabama ...
A slowly spinning universe could resolve a puzzle in physics known as the Hubble tension, a new model suggests.
Physicist Richard Lieu first explored the idea that gravity could exist without mass—now he’s got a new cosmological model ...
An intriguing new study suggests that the universe may rotate once every 500 billion years. If correct, the authors believe ...
A tiny but radical twist in the fabric of the cosmos could offer a breakthrough in one of astronomy’s most persistent ...
A new study in Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society by researchers including István Szapudi of the University of ...
A new study proposes that the universe may rotate at a nearly undetectable pace, offering a possible solution to the ...
The halo is more extended that astronomers originally thought, and contains enough hydrogen gas to resolve the problem of the ...
The rotating model, which does not break any known law of physics, suggests the universe could spin around once every 500 billion years. This would be far too slowly to detect easily, but enough to ...