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  2. Hubble volume - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hubble_volume

    In cosmology, a Hubble volume (named for the astronomer Edwin Hubble) or Hubble sphere, Hubble bubble, subluminal sphere, causal sphere and sphere of causality is a spherical region of the observable universe surrounding an observer beyond which objects recede from that observer at a rate greater than the speed of light due to the expansion of ...

  3. Cosmological horizon - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cosmological_horizon

    Hubble radius, Hubble sphere (not to be confused with a Hubble bubble), Hubble volume, or Hubble horizon is a conceptual horizon defining the boundary between particles that are moving slower and faster than the speed of light relative to an observer at one given time. Note that this does not mean the particle is unobservable; the light from ...

  4. Faint young Sun paradox - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Faint_young_Sun_paradox

    Specifically, using 1-D models, which represent Earth as a single point (instead of something that varies across 3 dimensions) scientists have determined that at 4.5 Ga, with a 30% dimmer Sun, a minimum partial pressure of 0.1 bar of CO 2 is required to maintain an above-freezing surface temperature; 10 bar of CO 2 has been suggested as a ...

  5. Observable universe - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Observable_universe

    The light from the smallest, most redshifted galaxies originated nearly 13.8 billion years ago. The comoving distance from Earth to the edge of the observable universe is about 14.26 gigaparsecs (46.5 billion light-years or 4.40 × 10 26 m) in any direction.

  6. Astronomy - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Astronomy

    The Sun has also undergone periodic changes in luminosity that can have a significant impact on the Earth. [107] The Maunder minimum, for example, is believed to have caused the Little Ice Age phenomenon during the Middle Ages. [108] At the center of the Sun is the core region, a volume of sufficient temperature and pressure for nuclear fusion ...

  7. Redshift - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Redshift

    For example, if a Sun-like spectrum had a redshift of z = 1, it would be brightest in the infrared(1000nm) rather than at the blue-green(500nm) color associated with the peak of its blackbody spectrum, and the light intensity will be reduced in the filter by a factor of four, (1 + z) 2. Both the photon count rate and the photon energy are ...

  8. Astronomical spectroscopy - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Astronomical_spectroscopy

    The larger the value of z, the more redshifted the light and the farther away the object is from the Earth. As of January 2013, the largest galaxy redshift of z~12 was found using the Hubble Ultra-Deep Field , corresponding to an age of over 13 billion years (the universe is approximately 13.82 billion years old).

  9. Albedo - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Albedo

    Water reflects light very differently from typical terrestrial materials. The reflectivity of a water surface is calculated using the Fresnel equations. At the scale of the wavelength of light even wavy water is always smooth so the light is reflected in a locally specular manner (not diffusely). The glint of light off water is a commonplace ...