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posted by n1 on Tuesday June 24 2014, @10:15PM   Printer-friendly
from the good-science dept.

The Higgs boson is delightfully stirring the mud puddle in the astrophysics community even after found! Instead of clearing everything up, now more questions have to be asked.

EarthSky.org reports:

British cosmologists are puzzled: they predict that the universe should not have lasted for more than a second. This startling conclusion is the result of combining the latest observations of the sky with the recent discovery of the Higgs boson. Robert Hogan of King's College London (KCL) presents the new research on June 24 at the Royal Astronomical Society's National Astronomy Meeting in Portsmouth.

The controversy seems to be about one of the predictions of BICEP2 allegedly being observed, and if so, Robert Hogan seems to think that if they did see this effect, then the universe would not exist today, it would have went straight to 'Big Crunch' right after the 'Big Bang'.

Pop the corn, this may be a good one!

 
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  • (Score: 2) by JeanCroix on Wednesday June 25 2014, @03:08PM

    by JeanCroix (573) on Wednesday June 25 2014, @03:08PM (#59900)
    One of the main points of relativity is that there is no absolute frame of reference.
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  • (Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Wednesday June 25 2014, @04:55PM

    by Anonymous Coward on Wednesday June 25 2014, @04:55PM (#59958)

    We do however have the CMB which provides us with, if nothing else, a bath of radiation relative to which we can define "preferred observers" (those who see a CMB without a dipole caused by Doppler effects). It's the nearest thing to an absolute reference frame we're going to get -- and it isn't very near, since it's nothing more than a consequence of relativity rather than a central tenet of physics -- and relative to the CMB we seem to be moving at around 330km/s.

    So the best answer we're going to be able to give to the guy you're replying to is "around 330km/s".