- Source: Cosmon
Cosmon or Cosmonium is a hypothetical form of matter. The idea was originally proposed by Georges Lemaître, who suggested the concept of a 'primeval atom’ (L'Hypothèse de l'Atome Primitif) 1946. He illustrated the idea by imagining an object 30 times larger than the volume of the sun containing all the matter of the Universe. Its density would be around
10
15
g cm
−
3
{\displaystyle 10^{15}{\text{g cm}}^{-3}}
. In his view, this occurred somewhere between 20 and 60 billion years ago.
The idea of a primeval “super-atom” lived on and was developed forward by Maurice Goldhaber in 1956. In his proposal there would have been a point, which had been called a Universon, that would have collapsed into a Cosmon and an Anticosmon pair. Goldhaber was questioned why is there any matter if equal amounts of matter and antimatter were formed in the big bang. One explanation for this is the asymmetry of matter meaning that there could have been slightly more matter than antimatter, for instance 1001 matter particles to every 1000 antimatter. In Goldhabers model cosmon and anticosmon would have flown apart and therefore explaining issue without asymmetry.
In 1989, Hans Dehmelt attempted to modernize the idea of the primeval atom. In this hypothesis, Cosmonium would have been the heaviest form of matter at the beginning of the big bang.
References
Kata Kunci Pencarian:
- Cosmon
- Maurice Goldhaber
- Gloria Lee
- Preon
- Christof Wetterich
- Arvind P. Nirmal
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- Solar Systems (company)