cosmological principle
Learn about this topic in these articles:
big-bang model
- In big-bang model
The second assumption, called the cosmological principle, states that an observer’s view of the universe depends neither on the direction in which he looks nor on his location. This principle applies only to the large-scale properties of the universe, but it does imply that the universe has no edge, so…
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studies of the universe
- In universe: Hubble’s research on extragalactic systems
…empirical justification for the so-called cosmological principle, a term coined by the English mathematician and astrophysicist Edward A. Milne to describe the assumption that at any instant in time the universe is, in the large, homogeneous and isotropic—i.e., statistically the same in every place and in every direction. This represented…
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theories in cosmology
- In cosmology: Einstein’s model
…outlook by naming it the cosmological principle. Given the success of the Copernican revolution, this outlook is a natural one. Newton himself had it implicitly in mind when he took the initial state of the universe to be everywhere the same before it developed “ye Sun and Fixt stars.”
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