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List of cosmologists

This is a list of people who have made noteworthy contributions to cosmology (the study of the history and large-scale structure of the universe) and their cosmological achievements

A edit

  • Tom Abel (1970–) studied primordial star formation
  • Roberto Abraham (1965–) studied the shapes of early galaxies
  • Andreas Albrecht studied the formation of the early universe, cosmic structure, and dark energy
  • Hannes Alfvén (1908–1995) theorized that galactic magnetic fields could be generated by plasma currents
  • Ralph A. Alpher (1921–2007) argued that observed proportions of hydrogen and helium in the universe could be explained by the big bang model, predicted cosmic background radiation
  • Aristarchus of Samos (310–230 BC) early proponent of heliocentrism
  • Aristotle (circa 384–322 BC) posited a geocentric cosmology that was widely accepted for many centuries
  • Aryabhata (476–550) described a geocentric model with slow and fast epicycles

B edit

  • Ja'far ibn Muhammad Abu Ma'shar al-Balkhi (787–886) conveyed Aristotle's theories from Persia to Europe
  • James M. Bardeen (1939–2022) studied the mathematics of black holes and of vacua under general relativity
  • John D. Barrow (1952–2020) popularized the anthropic cosmological principle
  • Charles L. Bennett (1956–) studied the large-scale structure of the universe by mapping irregularities in microwave background radiation
  • Orfeu Bertolami (1959–) studied the cosmological constant, inflation, dark energy-dark matter unification and interaction, alternative gravity theories
  • Somnath Bharadwaj (1964–) studied large-scale structure formation
  • James Binney (1950–) studied galactic dynamics and supernova disruption of galactic gasses
  • Martin Bojowald (1973–) studied loop quantum gravity and established loop quantum cosmology
  • Hermann Bondi (1919–2005) developed the steady-state model
  • Mustapha Ishak Boushaki (1967–) physicist researcher on Cosmology
  • Tycho Brahe (1546–1601) promoted a geo-heliocentric system of epicycles
  • Robert Brandenberger (1956–) formulated the theory of string gas cosmology, with colleague Cumrun Vafa, and developed cosmological perturbation theory

C edit

  • Bernard J. Carr (1949–) promoted the anthropic principle, studied primordial black holes
  • Sean M. Carroll (1966–) researched dark energy, general relativity, and spontaneous inflation
  • Gennady V. Chibisov (1946–2008) origin of cosmological density perturbations from quantum fluctuations
  • Peter Coles (1963–) modeled galactic clustering and authored several cosmology books
  • C. B. Collins used the anthropic principle to solve the flatness problem
  • Asantha Cooray (1973–) studied dark energy, halo models of large structure, and cosmic microwave radiation
  • Nicolaus Copernicus (1473–1543) formulated a heliocentric cosmology

D edit

  • Paul Davies (1946–) developed a vacuum model that explains microwave background fluctuation, studies time's arrow, and has written many popular-press books
  • Marc Davis (1947–) was lead astronomer of a survey of 50,000 high-redshift galaxies
  • Avishai Dekel (1951–) studied galaxy formation and large scale structure in dark matter-dark energy dominated universes
  • Robert H. Dicke (1916–1997) measured background radiation, used an early version of the anthropic principle to relate the gravitational constant to the age of the universe
  • Mike J. Disney (1937–) discovered low surface brightness galaxies

E edit

  • George Efstathiou (Cosmologist) (1955–) pioneering computer simulations, observations of galaxy clustering and studies of the fluctuations in the cosmic microwave background
  • Jürgen Ehlers (1929–2008) described gravitational lensing and studied the mathematical implications of an isotropic microwave background
  • Jaan Einasto (1929–) studied structure in the large-scale distribution of superclusters of galaxies, early proponent of dark matter
  • Albert Einstein (1879–1955) introduced general relativity and the cosmological constant
  • George F. R. Ellis (1939–) theorized a cylindrical steady-state universe with a naked singularity as recycling mechanism
  • Richard S. Ellis (1950–) used gravitational lensing and high-redshift supernovae to study the origin of galaxies, large scale structure, and dark matter

F edit

  • Sandra M. Faber (1944–) discovered the Great Attractor, a supercluster-scale gravitational anomaly; co-inventor of the theory of cold dark matter
  • Hume A. Feldman (1953–) studies cosmological perturbations and the statistical and dynamical properties of the large scale structure of the universe
  • Pedro G. Ferreira (1968–) his main interests are in general relativity and theoretical cosmology
  • Carlos S. Frenk (1951–) studied cosmic structure formation
  • Alexander Friedmann (1888–1925) discovered the expanding-universe solution to general relativity

G edit

  • George Gamow (1904–1968) argued that observed proportions of hydrogen and helium in the universe could be explained by the big bang model, modeled the mass and radius of primordial galaxies
  • Margaret J. Geller (1947–) discovered the Great Wall, a superstructure-scale filament of galaxies
  • Thomas Gold (1920–2004) proposed the steady-state theory
  • Gerson Goldhaber (1924–2010) used supernova observations to measure the energy density of the universe
  • J. Richard Gott (1947–) proposed the use of cosmic strings for time travel
  • Alan Guth (1947–) explained the isotropy of the universe by theorizing a phase of exponential inflation soon after the big bang

H edit

  • Stephen W. Hawking (1942–2018) described singularities in general relativity and developed singularity-free models of the big bang; predicted primordial black holes
  • Charles W. Hellaby described models of general relativity with nonconstant metric signature
  • Michał Heller (1936–) researched noncommutative approaches to quantum gravity
  • Robert C. Herman (1914–1997) predicted the background radiation temperature
  • Lars Hernquist (1954–) studied galaxy formation and evolution
  • Chris Hirata (1982–) researched weak gravitational lensing
  • Honorius Augustodunensis (c.1080−1151) wrote a popular encyclopedia of cosmology, geography, and world history
  • Hanns Hörbiger (1860–1931) formulated a pseudoscientific theory of ice as the basic substance of all cosmic processes
  • Fred Hoyle (1915–2001) promoted the steady state theory, used the anthropic principle to explain the energy levels of carbon nuclei
  • Edwin P. Hubble (1889–1953) demonstrated the existence of other galaxies and confirmed the relation between redshift and distance
  • John P. Huchra (1948–2010) discovered the Great Wall, a superstructure-scale filament of galaxies

I edit

K edit

  • Ronald Kantowski (1939–) discovered spatially homogeneous but anisotropic solutions to general relativity
  • Johannes Kepler (1571–1630) pioneered heliocentrism, discovered elliptical planetary motion, attempted to explain heavenly motions through physical causes
  • Isaak Markovich Khalatnikov (1919–2021) conjectured an oscillatory model with an essential singularity for the evolution of the universe
  • Tom W. B. Kibble (1932–2016) introduced the concept of cosmic strings
  • Robert Kirshner (1949–) discovered the Boötes void, a large region sparsely populated with galaxies, and wrote a popular book on cosmology
  • Edward Kolb (1951–) studied big bang cosmology including the emergence of baryons and dark matter, and wrote a popular textbook on cosmology
  • Lawrence M. Krauss (1954–) author of popular science books on cosmology including A Universe from Nothing

L edit

  • Ofer Lahav (1959–) studied dark matter and dark energy
  • Tod R. Lauer (1957–) catalogued massive black holes at galaxy centers and correlated their mass with other properties of the galaxies' structures
  • Georges Henri Lemaître (1894–1966) proposed the big bang theory and the distance-redshift relation
  • Janna Levin (1967–) seeks evidence for a bounded universe of nontrivial topology
  • Andrew R. Liddle (1965–) studied inflationary models, wrote two books on inflation and primordial inhomogeneities
  • Evgeny M. Lifshitz (1915–1985) conjectured an oscillatory model with an essential singularity for the evolution of the universe
  • Andrei Linde (1948–) pioneered inflationary models and proposed eternal chaotic inflation of universes from the false vacuum
  • Abraham Loeb (1962–) researched primordial stars, primordial black holes, quasars, reionization, gravitational lensing, and gamma-ray bursts
  • Jean-Pierre Luminet (1951–) studied black holes and the topology of the Universe
  • David H. Lyth (1940–) studied particle cosmology, wrote two books on inflation and primordial inhomogeneities

M edit

  • João Magueijo (1967–) proposed much faster speeds of light in the young universe as an alternative explanation to inflation for its homogeneity
  • Richard Massey (1977–) mapped dark matter in the universe
  • Charles W. Misner (1932–) studied solutions to general relativity including the mixmaster universe and Misner space, wrote influential text on gravitation
  • John Moffat (1932–) proposed much faster speeds of light in the young universe, developed antisymmetric theories of gravity
  • Lauro Moscardini (1961–) modeled galaxy clustering in the early universe

N edit

P edit

  • György Paál (1934–1992) in the late 1950s studied the quasar and galaxy cluster distributions, in 1970 from redshift quantization came up with the idea that the Universe might have nontrivial topological structure
  • Thanu Padmanabhan (1957–2021) studied quantum gravity and quantum cosmology
  • Leonard Parker (1938–) established the study of quantum field theory within general relativity
  • P. James E. Peebles (1935–) predicted cosmic background radiation, contributed to structure theory, developed models that avoid dark matter
  • Roger Penrose (1931–) linked singularities to gravitational collapse, conjectured the nonexistence of naked singularities, and used gravitational entropy to explain homogeneity
  • Arno Penzias (1933–2024) was the first to observe the cosmic background radiation
  • Saul Perlmutter (1959–) used supernova observations to measure the expansion of the universe
  • Mark M. Phillips (1951–) used supernova observations to discover acceleration in the expansion of the universe, calibrated the supernova distance scale
  • Joel Primack (1945–) co-invented the theory of cold dark matter
  • Ptolemy (90–168) wrote the only surviving ancient text on astronomy, conjectured a model of the universe as a set of nested spheres with epicycles

Q edit

  • Ali Qushji (1403–1474) challenged Aristotelian physics, in particular presenting empirical evidence against a stationary Earth, and may have influenced Copernicus

R edit

  • Lisa Randall (1962–) contributed to Randall–Sundrum models, which describe the world in terms of a warped geometry higher-dimensional universe
  • Martin Rees (1942–) proposed that quasars are powered by black holes, disproved steady state by studying distribution of quasars
  • Yoel Rephaeli used the distortion of the cosmic background by high-energy electrons to infer the existence of galaxy clusters
  • Adam Riess (1969–) found evidence in supernova data that the expansion of the universe is accelerating and confirming dark energy models
  • Wolfgang Rindler (1924–2019) coined the phrase "event horizon", Rindler Coordinates, and popularized the use of spinors (with Roger Penrose)
  • Howard P. Robertson (1903–1961) solved the two-body problem in an approximation to general relativity, developed the standard model of general relativity
  • Vera Rubin (1928–2016) discovered discrepancies in galactic rotation rates leading to the theory of dark matter

S edit

  • Rainer K. Sachs (1932–) discovered gravitationally induced redshifts in the cosmic background radiation
  • Carl Sagan (1934–1996)
  • Andrei Sakharov (1921–1989) invented the theory of twins, CPT-symmetric universes
  • Allan Sandage (1936–2010) set the cosmological distance scale and accurately estimated the speed of expansion of the universe
  • Brian P. Schmidt (1967–) used supernova data to measure the acceleration in the expansion of the universe
  • David N. Schramm (1945–1997) was an expert on big bang theory and an early proponent of dark matter
  • Dennis W. Sciama (1926–1999) studied many aspects of cosmology and supervised many other leading cosmologists
  • Irving Segal (1918–1998) created chronometric cosmology with alternative explanation of redshift in spectra of distant sources
  • Seleucus of Seleucia (c.190–c.150 BC) used tidal observations to support a heliocentric model
  • Roman Ulrich Sexl (1939–1986) developed an ether-based theory of absolute simultaneity that is mathematically equivalent to special relativity
  • Al-Sijzi (c. 945–1020) invented an astrolabe based on the Earth's rotation
  • Joseph Silk (1942–) explained the homogeneity of the early universe using photon diffusion damping
  • Willem de Sitter (1872–1934) developed a theory of dark matter with Einstein, found an expanding matterless solution to general relativity
  • Vesto Slipher (1875–1969) performed the first measurements of radial velocities for galaxies, providing the empirical basis for the expansion of the universe
  • Lee Smolin (1955–) studied quantum gravity, popularized a theory of cosmological natural selection
  • George F. Smoot (1945–) used Cosmic Background Explorer Satellite to measure the temperature and anisotropy of the early universe
  • David N. Spergel (1961–) used Wilkinson Microwave Anisotropy Probe satellite to measure the temperature and anisotropy of the early universe
  • Paul Steinhardt (1952–) pioneered inflationary cosmology, introduced first example of eternal inflation, introduced quintessential dark energy, introduced the concept of strongly self-interacting dark matter, studied brane cosmology and cyclic models of the universe
  • Abd al-Rahman al-Sufi (903–986) wrote the Book of Fixed Stars, which lists over forty constellations and the stars within them
  • Nicholas B. Suntzeff (1952–) used supernova observations to discover acceleration in the expansion of the universe, calibrated the supernova distance scale
  • Rashid Sunyaev (1943–) developed a theory of density fluctuations in the early universe, described how to use cosmic background distortion to observe large-scale density fluctuations
  • Alex Szalay (1949–) was working on structure formation in a neutrino-dominated universe, biased galaxy formation in a cold dark matter dominated universe and computing the power spectrum in hot, cold and warm dark matter dominated universes

T edit

  • Max Tegmark (1967–) determined the parameters of the lambda-cold dark matter model using Sloan Survey data, studied mathematical models of multiverses
  • Trinh Xuan Thuan (1948–) researched galaxy formation and evolution
  • William G. Tifft theorized that galactic redshifts are quantized
  • Beatrice Tinsley (1941–1981) researched galactic evolution, the creation of lightweight elements, and accelerated expansion of the universe
  • Frank J. Tipler (1947–) proved that time travel requires singularities, promoted the anthropic principle
  • Richard C. Tolman (1881–1948) showed that the cosmic background keeps a black-body profile as the universe expands
  • Mark Trodden (1968–) studied cosmological implications of topological defects in field theories
  • Michael S. Turner (1949–) coined the term dark energy
  • Neil Turok (1958–) predicted correlations between polarization and temperature anisotropy in the cosmic background, explained the big bang as a brane collision
  • Henry Tye (1947–) proposed brane-antibrane interactions as a cause of inflation

V edit

  • Alexander Vilenkin (1949–) showed that eternal inflation is generic, studied cosmic strings, theorized the creation of the universe from quantum fluctuations

W edit

  • Robert M. Wald (1947–) wrote a popular textbook on general relativity, studied the thermodynamics of black holes and created an axiomatic formulation of quantum field theory in curved spacetime.
  • Arthur Geoffrey Walker (1909–2001) developed the standard model of general relativity and studied the mathematics of relativistic reference frames
  • David Wands studied inflation, superstrings, and density perturbations in the early universe
  • Yun Wang (1964–) uses supernova and galactic redshift data to probe dark energy
  • Jeffrey Weeks (1956–) used cosmic background patterns to determine the topology of the universe
  • Simon D. White (1951–) studied galaxy formation in the lambda-cold dark matter model
  • David Todd Wilkinson (1935–2002) used satellite probes to measure the cosmic background radiation
  • Edward L. Wright (1947–) promoted big bang theories, studied the effect of dust absorption on measurements of the cosmic background

Z edit

  • Yakov Borisovich Zel'dovich (1914–1987) used accretion disks of massive black holes to explain quasars, predicted Compton scattering of the cosmic background
  • Fritz Zwicky (1898–1974) along with Walter Baade coined the term "supernova", contributions in understanding neutron stars, supernovae as standard candles, gravitational lensing, and dark matter.

See also edit

list, cosmologists, contents, this, list, people, have, made, noteworthy, contributions, cosmology, study, history, large, scale, structure, universe, their, cosmological, achievementsa, edittom, abel, 1970, studied, primordial, star, formation, roberto, abrah. Contents A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z This is a list of people who have made noteworthy contributions to cosmology the study of the history and large scale structure of the universe and their cosmological achievementsA editTom Abel 1970 studied primordial star formation Roberto Abraham 1965 studied the shapes of early galaxies Andreas Albrecht studied the formation of the early universe cosmic structure and dark energy Hannes Alfven 1908 1995 theorized that galactic magnetic fields could be generated by plasma currents Ralph A Alpher 1921 2007 argued that observed proportions of hydrogen and helium in the universe could be explained by the big bang model predicted cosmic background radiation Aristarchus of Samos 310 230 BC early proponent of heliocentrism Aristotle circa 384 322 BC posited a geocentric cosmology that was widely accepted for many centuries Aryabhata 476 550 described a geocentric model with slow and fast epicyclesB editJa far ibn Muhammad Abu Ma shar al Balkhi 787 886 conveyed Aristotle s theories from Persia to Europe James M Bardeen 1939 2022 studied the mathematics of black holes and of vacua under general relativity John D Barrow 1952 2020 popularized the anthropic cosmological principle Charles L Bennett 1956 studied the large scale structure of the universe by mapping irregularities in microwave background radiation Orfeu Bertolami 1959 studied the cosmological constant inflation dark energy dark matter unification and interaction alternative gravity theories Somnath Bharadwaj 1964 studied large scale structure formation James Binney 1950 studied galactic dynamics and supernova disruption of galactic gasses Martin Bojowald 1973 studied loop quantum gravity and established loop quantum cosmology Hermann Bondi 1919 2005 developed the steady state model Mustapha Ishak Boushaki 1967 physicist researcher on Cosmology Tycho Brahe 1546 1601 promoted a geo heliocentric system of epicycles Robert Brandenberger 1956 formulated the theory of string gas cosmology with colleague Cumrun Vafa and developed cosmological perturbation theoryC editBernard J Carr 1949 promoted the anthropic principle studied primordial black holes Sean M Carroll 1966 researched dark energy general relativity and spontaneous inflation Gennady V Chibisov 1946 2008 origin of cosmological density perturbations from quantum fluctuations Peter Coles 1963 modeled galactic clustering and authored several cosmology books C B Collins used the anthropic principle to solve the flatness problem Asantha Cooray 1973 studied dark energy halo models of large structure and cosmic microwave radiation Nicolaus Copernicus 1473 1543 formulated a heliocentric cosmologyD editPaul Davies 1946 developed a vacuum model that explains microwave background fluctuation studies time s arrow and has written many popular press books Marc Davis 1947 was lead astronomer of a survey of 50 000 high redshift galaxies Avishai Dekel 1951 studied galaxy formation and large scale structure in dark matter dark energy dominated universes Robert H Dicke 1916 1997 measured background radiation used an early version of the anthropic principle to relate the gravitational constant to the age of the universe Mike J Disney 1937 discovered low surface brightness galaxiesE editGeorge Efstathiou Cosmologist 1955 pioneering computer simulations observations of galaxy clustering and studies of the fluctuations in the cosmic microwave background Jurgen Ehlers 1929 2008 described gravitational lensing and studied the mathematical implications of an isotropic microwave background Jaan Einasto 1929 studied structure in the large scale distribution of superclusters of galaxies early proponent of dark matter Albert Einstein 1879 1955 introduced general relativity and the cosmological constant George F R Ellis 1939 theorized a cylindrical steady state universe with a naked singularity as recycling mechanism Richard S Ellis 1950 used gravitational lensing and high redshift supernovae to study the origin of galaxies large scale structure and dark matterF editSandra M Faber 1944 discovered the Great Attractor a supercluster scale gravitational anomaly co inventor of the theory of cold dark matter Hume A Feldman 1953 studies cosmological perturbations and the statistical and dynamical properties of the large scale structure of the universe Pedro G Ferreira 1968 his main interests are in general relativity and theoretical cosmology Carlos S Frenk 1951 studied cosmic structure formation Alexander Friedmann 1888 1925 discovered the expanding universe solution to general relativityG editGeorge Gamow 1904 1968 argued that observed proportions of hydrogen and helium in the universe could be explained by the big bang model modeled the mass and radius of primordial galaxies Margaret J Geller 1947 discovered the Great Wall a superstructure scale filament of galaxies Thomas Gold 1920 2004 proposed the steady state theory Gerson Goldhaber 1924 2010 used supernova observations to measure the energy density of the universe J Richard Gott 1947 proposed the use of cosmic strings for time travel Alan Guth 1947 explained the isotropy of the universe by theorizing a phase of exponential inflation soon after the big bangH editStephen W Hawking 1942 2018 described singularities in general relativity and developed singularity free models of the big bang predicted primordial black holes Charles W Hellaby described models of general relativity with nonconstant metric signature Michal Heller 1936 researched noncommutative approaches to quantum gravity Robert C Herman 1914 1997 predicted the background radiation temperature Lars Hernquist 1954 studied galaxy formation and evolution Chris Hirata 1982 researched weak gravitational lensing Honorius Augustodunensis c 1080 1151 wrote a popular encyclopedia of cosmology geography and world history Hanns Horbiger 1860 1931 formulated a pseudoscientific theory of ice as the basic substance of all cosmic processes Fred Hoyle 1915 2001 promoted the steady state theory used the anthropic principle to explain the energy levels of carbon nuclei Edwin P Hubble 1889 1953 demonstrated the existence of other galaxies and confirmed the relation between redshift and distance John P Huchra 1948 2010 discovered the Great Wall a superstructure scale filament of galaxiesI editMustapha Ishak Boushaki 1967 physicist researcher on Cosmology Jamal Nazrul Islam 1939 2013 published seven books on CosmologyK editRonald Kantowski 1939 discovered spatially homogeneous but anisotropic solutions to general relativity Johannes Kepler 1571 1630 pioneered heliocentrism discovered elliptical planetary motion attempted to explain heavenly motions through physical causes Isaak Markovich Khalatnikov 1919 2021 conjectured an oscillatory model with an essential singularity for the evolution of the universe Tom W B Kibble 1932 2016 introduced the concept of cosmic strings Robert Kirshner 1949 discovered the Bootes void a large region sparsely populated with galaxies and wrote a popular book on cosmology Edward Kolb 1951 studied big bang cosmology including the emergence of baryons and dark matter and wrote a popular textbook on cosmology Lawrence M Krauss 1954 author of popular science books on cosmology including A Universe from NothingL editOfer Lahav 1959 studied dark matter and dark energy Tod R Lauer 1957 catalogued massive black holes at galaxy centers and correlated their mass with other properties of the galaxies structures Georges Henri Lemaitre 1894 1966 proposed the big bang theory and the distance redshift relation Janna Levin 1967 seeks evidence for a bounded universe of nontrivial topology Andrew R Liddle 1965 studied inflationary models wrote two books on inflation and primordial inhomogeneities Evgeny M Lifshitz 1915 1985 conjectured an oscillatory model with an essential singularity for the evolution of the universe Andrei Linde 1948 pioneered inflationary models and proposed eternal chaotic inflation of universes from the false vacuum Abraham Loeb 1962 researched primordial stars primordial black holes quasars reionization gravitational lensing and gamma ray bursts Jean Pierre Luminet 1951 studied black holes and the topology of the Universe David H Lyth 1940 studied particle cosmology wrote two books on inflation and primordial inhomogeneitiesM editJoao Magueijo 1967 proposed much faster speeds of light in the young universe as an alternative explanation to inflation for its homogeneity Richard Massey 1977 mapped dark matter in the universe Charles W Misner 1932 studied solutions to general relativity including the mixmaster universe and Misner space wrote influential text on gravitation John Moffat 1932 proposed much faster speeds of light in the young universe developed antisymmetric theories of gravity Lauro Moscardini 1961 modeled galaxy clustering in the early universeN editJayant Narlikar 1938 promoted steady state theories Isaac Newton 1642 1727 formulated the law of universal gravitation and supported the heliocentric modelP editGyorgy Paal 1934 1992 in the late 1950s studied the quasar and galaxy cluster distributions in 1970 from redshift quantization came up with the idea that the Universe might have nontrivial topological structure Thanu Padmanabhan 1957 2021 studied quantum gravity and quantum cosmology Leonard Parker 1938 established the study of quantum field theory within general relativity P James E Peebles 1935 predicted cosmic background radiation contributed to structure theory developed models that avoid dark matter Roger Penrose 1931 linked singularities to gravitational collapse conjectured the nonexistence of naked singularities and used gravitational entropy to explain homogeneity Arno Penzias 1933 2024 was the first to observe the cosmic background radiation Saul Perlmutter 1959 used supernova observations to measure the expansion of the universe Mark M Phillips 1951 used supernova observations to discover acceleration in the expansion of the universe calibrated the supernova distance scale Joel Primack 1945 co invented the theory of cold dark matter Ptolemy 90 168 wrote the only surviving ancient text on astronomy conjectured a model of the universe as a set of nested spheres with epicyclesQ editAli Qushji 1403 1474 challenged Aristotelian physics in particular presenting empirical evidence against a stationary Earth and may have influenced CopernicusR editLisa Randall 1962 contributed to Randall Sundrum models which describe the world in terms of a warped geometry higher dimensional universe Martin Rees 1942 proposed that quasars are powered by black holes disproved steady state by studying distribution of quasars Yoel Rephaeli used the distortion of the cosmic background by high energy electrons to infer the existence of galaxy clusters Adam Riess 1969 found evidence in supernova data that the expansion of the universe is accelerating and confirming dark energy models Wolfgang Rindler 1924 2019 coined the phrase event horizon Rindler Coordinates and popularized the use of spinors with Roger Penrose Howard P Robertson 1903 1961 solved the two body problem in an approximation to general relativity developed the standard model of general relativity Vera Rubin 1928 2016 discovered discrepancies in galactic rotation rates leading to the theory of dark matterS editRainer K Sachs 1932 discovered gravitationally induced redshifts in the cosmic background radiation Carl Sagan 1934 1996 Andrei Sakharov 1921 1989 invented the theory of twins CPT symmetric universes Allan Sandage 1936 2010 set the cosmological distance scale and accurately estimated the speed of expansion of the universe Brian P Schmidt 1967 used supernova data to measure the acceleration in the expansion of the universe David N Schramm 1945 1997 was an expert on big bang theory and an early proponent of dark matter Dennis W Sciama 1926 1999 studied many aspects of cosmology and supervised many other leading cosmologists Irving Segal 1918 1998 created chronometric cosmology with alternative explanation of redshift in spectra of distant sources Seleucus of Seleucia c 190 c 150 BC used tidal observations to support a heliocentric model Roman Ulrich Sexl 1939 1986 developed an ether based theory of absolute simultaneity that is mathematically equivalent to special relativity Al Sijzi c 945 1020 invented an astrolabe based on the Earth s rotation Joseph Silk 1942 explained the homogeneity of the early universe using photon diffusion damping Willem de Sitter 1872 1934 developed a theory of dark matter with Einstein found an expanding matterless solution to general relativity Vesto Slipher 1875 1969 performed the first measurements of radial velocities for galaxies providing the empirical basis for the expansion of the universe Lee Smolin 1955 studied quantum gravity popularized a theory of cosmological natural selection George F Smoot 1945 used Cosmic Background Explorer Satellite to measure the temperature and anisotropy of the early universe David N Spergel 1961 used Wilkinson Microwave Anisotropy Probe satellite to measure the temperature and anisotropy of the early universe Paul Steinhardt 1952 pioneered inflationary cosmology introduced first example of eternal inflation introduced quintessential dark energy introduced the concept of strongly self interacting dark matter studied brane cosmology and cyclic models of the universe Abd al Rahman al Sufi 903 986 wrote the Book of Fixed Stars which lists over forty constellations and the stars within them Nicholas B Suntzeff 1952 used supernova observations to discover acceleration in the expansion of the universe calibrated the supernova distance scale Rashid Sunyaev 1943 developed a theory of density fluctuations in the early universe described how to use cosmic background distortion to observe large scale density fluctuations Alex Szalay 1949 was working on structure formation in a neutrino dominated universe biased galaxy formation in a cold dark matter dominated universe and computing the power spectrum in hot cold and warm dark matter dominated universesT editMax Tegmark 1967 determined the parameters of the lambda cold dark matter model using Sloan Survey data studied mathematical models of multiverses Trinh Xuan Thuan 1948 researched galaxy formation and evolution William G Tifft theorized that galactic redshifts are quantized Beatrice Tinsley 1941 1981 researched galactic evolution the creation of lightweight elements and accelerated expansion of the universe Frank J Tipler 1947 proved that time travel requires singularities promoted the anthropic principle Richard C Tolman 1881 1948 showed that the cosmic background keeps a black body profile as the universe expands Mark Trodden 1968 studied cosmological implications of topological defects in field theories Michael S Turner 1949 coined the term dark energy Neil Turok 1958 predicted correlations between polarization and temperature anisotropy in the cosmic background explained the big bang as a brane collision Henry Tye 1947 proposed brane antibrane interactions as a cause of inflationV editAlexander Vilenkin 1949 showed that eternal inflation is generic studied cosmic strings theorized the creation of the universe from quantum fluctuationsW editRobert M Wald 1947 wrote a popular textbook on general relativity studied the thermodynamics of black holes and created an axiomatic formulation of quantum field theory in curved spacetime Arthur Geoffrey Walker 1909 2001 developed the standard model of general relativity and studied the mathematics of relativistic reference frames David Wands studied inflation superstrings and density perturbations in the early universe Yun Wang 1964 uses supernova and galactic redshift data to probe dark energy Jeffrey Weeks 1956 used cosmic background patterns to determine the topology of the universe Simon D White 1951 studied galaxy formation in the lambda cold dark matter model David Todd Wilkinson 1935 2002 used satellite probes to measure the cosmic background radiation Edward L Wright 1947 promoted big bang theories studied the effect of dust absorption on measurements of the cosmic backgroundZ editYakov Borisovich Zel dovich 1914 1987 used accretion disks of massive black holes to explain quasars predicted Compton scattering of the cosmic background Fritz Zwicky 1898 1974 along with Walter Baade coined the term supernova contributions in understanding neutron stars supernovae as standard candles gravitational lensing and dark matter See also editTimeline of cosmological theories Contents A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title List of cosmologists amp oldid 1207171466, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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